Cameroon NCDI Poverty Commission
Commission Chair and Vice-Chair
Professor Samuel Kingue – Department of Internal Medicine and Cardiology, University of Yaounde 1
Professor Robinson Enow Mbu – Director of Family Health, Ministry of Public Health
Commissioners
Dr. Bachire Hassan Ben – Director of Cooperation, Ministry of Health
Dr. Aristide Stéphane Abah Abah – Sub-Director for NCDIs, Ministry of Health
Professor Sobngwi
Professor Pondi
Professor Bella
Professor Owono Etoundi
Dr. Françoise Ngo Sack
Professor Alexis Ndom
Dr. Dodo Balkissou Adamou
Dr. Paul Ndom
Dr. Bernard Metogo
Dr. Nono
Dr. Emtom Sepde
Dr. Judith Marlyse Seungue
Dr. Suzanne Belinga
Dr. Farida Haoua
Dr. Marcel Nwaha Nwaha
Coordinators
Dr. Yauba Saidu – Coordinator, CHAI Cameroon
Partners
Dr. Yauba Saidu – Coordinator, CHAI Cameroon
Dr. Kouame Euphrasie – PNUD
Dr. Daphne B. Moffett – CDC
Dr. Douba Emmanuel – OMS
Cameroon Updates
Health officials from several French-speaking countries in western and central Africa have begun meeting in a new webinar series to share—in French—their challenges and successes in expanding care for people living with severe noncommunicable diseases. The new series solidifies a groundbreaking collaboration that began with a February study tour in Sierra Leone.
The WHO Regional Office for Africa recently published a landmark report that details the impact and momentum of the PEN-Plus model, providing a valuable tool for advocacy and information about integrated care for people living with severe, chronic noncommunicable diseases.
A “game-changing” study tour of a PEN-Plus clinic in Sierra Leone introduced Ministry of Health officials from six other Francophone nations to the role integration can play in providing quality care for people living with severe noncommunicable diseases in low- and lower-middle-income countries.
The NCDI Poverty Network has published a French edition of PEN-Plus Clinical Tools and Programmatic Standards, a document that defines the diagnostic, treatment, and patient support services that compose PEN-Plus. Several francophone countries have already initiated PEN-Plus.
The first International Conference on PEN-Plus in Africa provided a platform for health experts, policymakers, civil society organization representatives, donors, people living with noncommunicable diseases, and community advocates to expedite political and financial backing for PEN-Plus.
Efforts to expand PEN-Plus across sub-Saharan Africa received a major boost today, when the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust announced a $9 million grant to the World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa to expand care for people living with severe noncommunicable diseases (NCDs).
Members of the Cameroon NCDI Poverty Commission met in Yaounde on May 10 to review the results of their situation analysis and priority-setting work on the country’s noncommunicable disease burden. Attending were leaders and representatives of both the Ministry of Health and the country office of the World Health Organization.
The Cameroon NCDI Poverty Commission convened in Yaounde for a four-hour meeting on 31 May to set priorities based on an initial analysis of the non-communicable diseases and injuries (NCDI) burden in the country.
For the first time on 25 May, NCDI Poverty Commissions that launched in 2021 and are working on Phase 1 of the Commission process – situation analysis and priority-setting – presented to other Phase I Commission teams in the fifth Learning Workshop titled “Learning From each other - progress updates from Nigeria and Cameroon.”
The Cameroon NCDI Poverty Commission held its inaugural meeting on 16 March 2021 in Yaoundé. Members were led by Chair, Professor Samuel Kingue and Vice Chair, Professor Mbu Robinson and included a wide range of high-level representatives from different public partners and local stakeholders.