Equinet Africa

EQUINET, the Regional Network on Equity in Health in East and Southern Africa, is a network of professionals, civil society members, policy makers, state officials and others within the region who have come together as an equity catalyst, to promote and realise shared values of equity and social justice in health.

EQUINET gathers people to overcome isolation, give voice and promote networking using bottom-up approaches built on shared values. We have come together in a spirit of self determination and collective self reliance working through existing government, civil society, research and other mechanisms and institutions in East and Southern Africa.

EQUINET is building a forum for dialogue, learning, sharing of information and experience and critical analysis. We do this to build knowledge and perspectives, shape effective strategies, strengthen our voice nationally, regionally and globally and to buiild strategic alliances to influence policy, politics and practice towards health equity and social justice.

EQUINET's work covers a wide range of areas identified as priorities for health equity, within the political economy of health, health services and inputs to health, covered in the theme areas shown on this site. EQUINET is governed by a steering committee with representatives from institutions in the region, has five cluster leads that co-ordinate major areas of work and has a secretariat at the Training and Research Support Centre Zimbabwe.

In 2020 as a response to the COVID-19 epidemic we have under our newsletter work prepared information briefs that compile relevant evidence for the ESA region on COVID-19, its epidemiology, impact, prevention  and management. Please read past sheets on the website under EQUINET publications and subscribe if you would like to receive future sheets.  We welcome information from or relevant to the region to be included in the information briefs 



EQUINET and PHM East and Southern Africa Regional People's Health University, July 29 to November 12 2021 

The first East and Southern Africa Regional People’s Health University (ESA RPHU) jointly convened by PHM and EQUINET was successfully held virtually between 29 July and 12 November with the theme ‘Past, present and future struggles for Health equity’.  The course aimed to build and share evidence, experience, analysis and knowledge on the drivers of health equity to support efforts and activism within countries, as new and existing members of PHM and EQUINET, and in regional co-operation and joint engagement, from local to global level, on shared priorities. The course linked key areas of evidence and knowledge to practical experiences and action to share insights and build learning from action. Please visit the RPHU page on this website for further details, and the RPHU Resources page for the open access resources and selected recordings of  presentations from the RPHU.

Multimethods work on mental health and wellbeing of urban youth in East and Southern African countries

Invitation of expressions of interest 

EQUINET is implementing work using a mix of methods on mental health and wellbeing in urban youth in a context of COVID-19, to share experiences, exchange and learning from in east and southern Africa. The work, which involves dialogues,  desk reviews, online tools and other approaches, aims to convene an information/ exchange process for participatory voice of and exchange between urban and peri-urban young people on their mental health generally, how COVID-19 has affected this, where young people get support and services for mental health challenges, what gaps are perceived and what recommendations young people have for improving responses.  Prior work in EQUINET on urban health already referred to youth mental health as an area that is of rising concern but largely ignored or underserved by services. Anecdotal information from conversations with young people by CFYDDI Uganda and CMPD Malawi as EQUINET members suggest that young people face a number of stresses driving mental ill-health and reply more on social support than on support from formal services for problems. A desk review implemented by IWGHSS and EQUINET provides further evidence of this in our region.

The COVID-19 pandemic has intensified many stressors, but also presents an opportunity to understand and respond to mental health issues  from a reactive and narrow biomedical or stigmatising lens to one that locates the causes in living, working and social conditions and that requires a wider and more holistic set of community and sectoral  responses that engage with young people in their design.  The pandemic has already shown the ideas and innovation that young people bring to such responses. The work we are doing in EQUINET with partners seeks to further explore and share experience, ideas, resources and  responses directly from young people and those working with and supporting young people. admin [at] equinetafrica.org (subject: Youth%20mental%20health) (Please write to us) with ‘youth mental health’ in the subject line if you are interested in connecting on this work, with brief information or links on your work, areas of focus or interest. 


Latest Equinet Publications

Abstract submission form, EQUINET Conference, September 23-25 2009
EQUINET (2008 July)
Themes:
Equity in health
Country
First announcement: EQUINET Regional Conference, Uganda, September 23-25 2009
EQUINET (2008 July)
Themes:
Equity in health
Country
Discussion Paper 62: Incentives for health worker retention in Kenya: An assessment of current practice
Ndetei, DM; Khasakhala, L; Omolo, JO; Africa Mental Health Foundation (AMHF); Institute of Policy Analysis and Research (IPAR), Kenya (2008 July)
Themes:
Human resources for health
Country
Kenya
Editoriais do Boletim da“EQUINET Newsletter”, Janeiro 2007 – Maio 2008
EQUINET, TARSC (2008 July)
Themes:
Equity in health
Country
East and southern Africa region
Discussion paper 64: Exploring the concept of power in the implementation of South Africa's new community health worker policies: A case study from a rural sub-district
Lehmann, U; Matwa, P; School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape (2007 April)
Themes:
Values, policies and rights, Human resources for health, Monitoring equity and research to policy
Country
South Africa
Discussion Paper 60: Progress towards the Abuja target for government spending on health care in East and Southern Africa
Govender, V; McIntyre, D; Loewenson, R; Health Economics Unit, University of Cape Town; TARSC (2008 April)
Themes:
Resource allocation and health financing
Country
East and southern Africa region
Discussion Paper 63: A review of Kenyan, Ugandan and Tanzanian public health law relevant to equity in health
Kasimbazi, E; Moses, M; Loewenson, R; The Faculty of Law, Makerere University; TARSC (2008 May)
Themes:
Values, policies and rights
Country
East Africa regional
Discussion Paper 59: Building strategies for sustainability and equity of prepayment schemes in Uganda: Bridging the gaps
Kyomugisha, EL; Buregyeya, E; Ekirapa, E; Mugisha, JF; Bazeyo, W; School of Public Health, Makerere University; Regional Centre for Quality of Health Care, Kampala, Uganda (2008 April)
Themes:
Public-private mix, Resource allocation and health financing
Country
Uganda
Discussion Paper 58: Assessment of equity in the uptake of anti-retrovirals in Malawi
Muula, AS; Kataika, E; Department of Community Health and College of Medicine, University of Malawi (2008 April)
Themes:
Resource allocation and health financing, Equity and HIV/AIDS
Country
Malawi
PRA report: Community action for health in ‘Ontevrede’ community
University of Namibia; Ontevrede community (2008 April)
Themes:
Governance and participation in health
Country
Zimbabwe

Pages