Today is International Women’s Day – an important annual occasion to celebrate the immense potential of women and girls. Right now, however, too many women are still held back from reaching their full potential because of poor health, markedly decreasing the social and economic growth of their communities.
But there’s good news. We already have the life-saving information, technology, and tools to improve the health of women and girls worldwide. Every day PSI and its partners are working to bring these solutions to women and girls, particularly in rural areas of the developing world where the need is greatest.
To understand more about PSI’s approach to revolutionizing the health of women and girls on a global scale, read the article below, published today on the Skoll Foundation’s website, by PSI Vice President Kate Roberts.
PHILANTHROPY THAT DELIVERS FOR WOMEN
By: Kate Roberts
Vice President, Corporate Marketing, Communications & Advocacy, PSI
There are some global challenges that we do not yet know how to solve. Improving the health of girls and women worldwide is not one of them.
On the contrary, we already have the necessary tools in our possession. Reliable health data allows us to pinpoint and develop solutions for the greatest threats to their health. We have modern diagnostic technologies capable of identifying disease. We have vaccines and health products that offer safe and effective disease prevention barriers. We also have medicines to treat the majority of the leading causes of death among girls and women.
But these advances are worth little unless we are able to deliver them to women living in the furthest regions of the developing world that need them most. When people ask me what is needed, I explain that we need to find new ways to deliver and create demand for health solutions that already exist so they reach the developing world. When someone asks me how they can help, I let them know that donations and private investments are often the only sources of funding that allow us to test and develop promising health solutions that governments and businesses can’t afford to advance on their own.
Read the full article here.