Dr Tebelele

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Dr Tebelele

Dr Tebelele

@aphilecomms

APHILE Communications,Lifecoach,Leadership Healthtalks: [email protected]: Health Content Contributor @ UMhlobo Wenene FM #KKM📻🇿🇦🏆qhamaninande 🎤0713257023

Port Elizabeth, South Africa Se unió Nisan 2017
1.4K Siguiendo6.2K Seguidores
Dr Tebelele retuiteado
AQUITY Innovations NPC
AQUITY Innovations NPC@AquitySA·
The WHO’s 90–70–90 strategy is a simple roadmap to end cervical cancer: 90% of girls vaccinated against HPV 70% of women screened 90% of those diagnosed treatedIf we act early, we save lives. A cervical cancer-free future is possible. #CervicalCancerElimination
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Dr Tebelele
Dr Tebelele@aphilecomms·
Kanyisa Dube – SA National AIDS Council (SANAC), Women’s Sector: “We must reach women everywhere—in the system and beyond. Early detection saves lives. Sex workers must also have access to prevention services to protect their health.” National Council of Trade Unions (NACTU): “We need to do more on prevention and awareness. These are our mothers and sisters who deserve support.” Business Unity South Africa (BUSA): “Cervical cancer is preventable. Each death reflects a system failure. The private sector has a critical role to play—through vaccination, screening, treatment, and innovation. Investing in women’s health strengthens our economy and builds capacity. Access to affordable prevention, mobile clinics with NGOs, and workplace initiatives are essential.” Professor Helen Rees – Global Health & Vaccines Expert: “Many women don’t know about cervical cancer risks, so community engagement is essential. Our research spans multiple provinces and focuses on women living with HIV, who are at higher risk of cervical cancer. Community partnerships are key, and South Africa must lead with an agenda that reflects our context and the African region.” Shenaaz El-Halabi – WHO Country Representative: “Today’s engagement sets the next steps to deliver results for women and children in South Africa. Cervical cancer remains a major issue, but it is treatable if detected early. We applaud South Africa’s progress and urge strengthening primary health care and community-based platforms.” Dr. Aaron Motsoaledi – Minister of Health: “Cervical cancer is preventable and treatable, yet often diagnosed too late. HIV increases the risk—women with HIV are six times more likely to develop cervical cancer. South Africa carries a disproportionate burden. Eliminating this disease by 2030 is not just a health priority—it’s a matter of social justice.” @AquitySA @HealthZA @nyathie_sipho @HealthZA
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Dr Tebelele retuiteado
AQUITY Innovations NPC
AQUITY Innovations NPC@AquitySA·
Did you know? SA aims to: - Vaccinate 90% of girls by 15 - Screen 70% of women at 35 & 45 - Treat 90% of diagnosed cases With strong commitment & school campaigns, we’re moving closer to these goals. This #WorldCancerDay, let’s work together to eliminate cervical cancer.
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Dr Tebelele retuiteado
AQUITY Innovations NPC
AQUITY Innovations NPC@AquitySA·
Collaboration is key to tackling cervical cancer in South Africa. Experts from WHO, trade unions, business, civil society, and government are actively discussing strategies to strengthen prevention, early detection, and treatment programmes. #CervicalCancerSA #StrongerTogether
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Dr Tebelele
Dr Tebelele@aphilecomms·
Homecoming kaEsi 2025
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Dr Tebelele
Dr Tebelele@aphilecomms·
MEN 🔭🔍🔬🍒🧠🍆MenUP @Nkandla_LS 🥒🥒🥑🥑🍠🎤
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Dr Tebelele
Dr Tebelele@aphilecomms·
Movemba🇿🇦👁️🔬
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