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#SeeMe campaign: highlighting the impact of Make Way
We have launched the final part of our #SeeMe campaign under the Make Way programme. It focuses on the impact of Make Way in Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia, and on the regional and global level. Through six interviews with youth, religious leaders and civil society, we show how Make Way has increased the understanding of the importance of an intersectional approach to ensure sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) for all, and the vital role of youth in this.
Read more ➔ |
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Wemos in the media about fair pricing of new medicines
In an opinion piece for Zorgvisie – a Dutch magazine about healthcare policy – Ella Weggen of Wemos argues that the government must set limits on prices of new medicines. Unexplainably high medicine prices are putting a heavy burden on healthcare budgets. In an article by the newspaper De Telegraaf, Ella advocates the cost-plus-plus model for setting a fair price. With this model, the price is calculated on the basis of the cost price plus a fair profit margin plus a contribution to new research into medicines. Read more ➔ |
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New episodes of the Make Way for Youth podcast
In two new episodes, we are joined by Agnes Namuwonge from Nexus Youth Initiative and Leah Mukoya from FARUG from Uganda (episode 3), and Zelalem Andualem and Lidiya Alemayehu from the Ethiopia Make Way Youth Panel (episode 4). They reflect on how Make Way has shaped their personal and professional journeys and deepened their understanding of intersectionality. Listen to episode 3 on YouTube, Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Likewise, episode 4 can be found on YouTube, Spotify and Apple Podcasts. |
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Impact stories of our work
Wemos envisions a world where we can all be as healthy as possible. We aim to make this reality by driving structural change to achieve global health justice, working with allies all over the world. Over the years, the impact of our work has become evident on various levels, whether at the global level, such as at the United Nations High-Level Meeting, or at the national level in partner countries, like Rwanda and Kenya. Read more ➔ |
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Wemos tips and picks
In Everything is Tuberculosis, John Green, a passionate advocate for global healthcare reform, tells a deeply human story illuminating the fight against the world’s deadliest disease. Green tells the story of Henry, a young tuberculosis patient he met in 2019 at Lakka Government Hospital in Sierra Leone, combined with scientific and social histories of how tuberculosis has shaped our world and how our choices will shape the future of tuberculosis. Read more ➔ |
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