Peter Anwuli

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Peter Anwuli

Peter Anwuli

@iamanwuli

A lover of God and people. #Making positive impact where ever I go.

Nigeria Katılım Temmuz 2012
358 Takip Edilen267 Takipçiler
Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
The walk through Freetown has ended, but West Africa’s test of political courage has only begun. This #NHWPost by @bakare_yasir breaks down commitments from the 27th Ordinary Session of the ECOWAS Assembly of Health Ministers, and what it will take to turn them into action across the region. A must-read: nhwat.ch/4eG0Mzg
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Protecting newborns requires responsible antibiotic use to curb antimicrobial resistance. At 4:30pm today on @NigeriainfoFM, our Knowledge Management Lead, @iamanwuli, will discuss drug-resistant infections in neonatal wards and why responsible antibiotic use matters. Listen live: nigeriainfo.fm/abuja #NHWOnAir #AMR
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
In the advocacy work we do to improve health outcomes for all Nigerians, your voice matters to us. We are conducting an anonymous survey to better understand the impact of our work and how we can continue to strengthen health communication, advocacy, and public engagement. We appreciate your continued support. Kindly take a few minutes to complete the survey: surveymonkey.com/r/MZ2MF95 #NHWImpact
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
A major step forward in strengthening lassa fever vaccine preparedness in West Africa. A study titled “A Prioritised Research Agenda to Inform the Introduction and Use of Lassa fever Vaccines in West Africa” brings together insights from experts to identify the most critical evidence needed for timely, effective, and equitable vaccine introduction in West Africa. Read the full piece here: ijidonline.com/article/S1201-… #EndLassaFever
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Strong health systems are built on the strength, compassion, and commitment of healthcare workers. This year’s #InternationalNursesDay theme, “Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives,” reminds us that supporting nurses requires investing in their wellbeing, safety, and ability to thrive.
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
The Nigerian @NGRSenate's passage of the BHCPF Amendment Bill to increase the Basic Health Care Provision Fund from 1% to 2% of the Consolidated Revenue Fund could mark a major shift in primary healthcare financing in Nigeria. The proposed increase is widely seen as critical to strengthening implementation of the NHIA Act, improving primary healthcare services, expanding insurance coverage for vulnerable populations, and reducing the burden of out-of-pocket healthcare spending on Nigerians. @Fmohnigeria
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
International Day of the Midwife should be more than a symbolic moment. It is a reminder that investing in midwives is one of the smartest ways to reduce maternal and newborn deaths, especially as global health funding shrinks. This #NHWPost by Anna af Ugglas and @olubunmi_ooo explores why midwives remain central to safer births, stronger health systems, and more efficient healthcare spending. Read: nhwat.ch/4tD1rW9 #IDM2026 @world_midwives
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
The Nigeria Health Watch team, led by our Managing Director, @VIhekweazu, had the pleasure of meeting @UNFPA Representative @muriel_mafico, and the team at their Abuja office. It was a great opportunity to reintroduce Nigeria Health Watch’s advocacy and communications work and discuss our role as an implementing partner to @UNFPANigeria. Our conversation focused on how we can continue to work together to advance UNFPA’s priorities in sexual and reproductive health and rights, gender-based violence, maternal health, adolescent health, and the demographic dividend. We also shared Nigeria Health Watch’s strengths in strategic advocacy, policy engagement, multi-platform communications, and subnational engagement, and how these capabilities can help amplify the impact of UNFPA’s programmes.
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Maternal and newborn survival strongly depends on how prepared health workers are when emergencies arise. This interactive #NHWPost by Zuwena Khatib, @TzarOluigbo, and @MahdiGarba explains how simulation-based training is improving the way health workers in Nigeria and Tanzania manage pregnancy and childbirth emergencies. Read here: nhwat.ch/4tvT5zu @Fmohnigeria
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Have you explored the new Nigeria Health Watch website yet?🤔 From powerful health stories & expert insights to reports & advocacy content, everything is now easier to access in one refreshed space. Take a look around and tell us your favourite feature👉🏾 nigeriahealthwatch.com
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
When conversations around infectious diseases begin to trend, access to accurate and reliable information becomes even more important. Curious about #Hantavirus, how it spreads, and the symptoms to look out for? We have outlined key facts you should know to help you stay informed and aware.
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Africa Health Watch
Africa Health Watch@africahlthwatch·
Nigeria’s malaria gains are real but sustaining them will require stronger systems. In this article, Scott Dubin examines the gap of delivery systems in Nigeria’s #malaria response. While the country continues to demonstrate extraordinary campaign capacity, stockouts at the point of care reveal deeper challenges around coordination, logistics, and routine system reliability. Drawing on lessons from Rwanda and Senegal, this article explores what happens when countries treat delivery systems not as a supporting function, but as core health infrastructure. Read full article: africahealthwatch.com/p/nigerias-mal… #Malariaresponse #AfricaHealth
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Great health systems are built when ideas, innovation, and leadership meet in the same room. WHX Lagos is shaping up to be a space where real conversations about the future of healthcare in Africa will take place. There’s still time to be part of it👉🏾 worldhealthexpo.com #WHXLagos #WHXLeaders
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Healthcare innovation is moving fast, but the real question is how much of it is reaching the people who need it most. The Future of Health Conference 2026 will create space for honest conversations on what it takes to move from promising ideas to real-world change that strengthens health systems and improves access to care. Save the Date: 29th October 2026. Stay informed 👉🏾 nhwat.ch/4nw7Ukg #FHC2026
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Strong leadership, collaboration and solidarity all matter. Diseases, as we have seen time and again, do not respect borders and health security is a collective responsibility. Countries must work together and build stronger health systems that can detect and respond to outbreaks quickly to protect people. #CollaborativeSurveillance @NCDCgov @WHONigeria
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus@DrTedros

To the people of Tenerife, My name is Tedros, and I serve as the Director-General of the @WHO, the @UN agency responsible for global public health. It is not common for me to write directly to the people of a single community, but today I feel it is not only appropriate, it is necessary. I want to speak to you directly, not through press releases or technical briefings, but as one human being to another, because you deserve that. I know you are worried. I know that when you hear the word “outbreak” and watch a ship sail toward your shores, memories surface that none of us have fully put to rest. The pain of 2020 is still real, and I do not dismiss it for a single moment. But I need you to hear me clearly: this is not another COVID-19. the current public health risk from #hantavirus remains low. My colleagues and I have said this unequivocally, and I will say it again to you now. The virus aboard the MV Hondius is the Andes strain of hantavirus. It is serious. Three people have lost their lives, and our hearts go out to their families. The risk to you, living your daily life in Tenerife, is low. This is the WHO’s assessment, and we do not make it lightly. Right now, there are no symptomatic passengers on board. A WHO expert is on that ship. Medical supplies are in place. Spain’s authorities have prepared a careful, step-by-step plan: passengers will be ferried ashore at the industrial port of Granadilla, far from residential areas, in sealed, guarded vehicles, through a completely cordoned-off corridor, and repatriated directly to their home countries. You will not encounter them. Your families will not encounter them. I also want to say something else, something that goes beyond the science. I personally thanked Prime Minister @sanchezcastejon for #Spain’s decision to receive this ship. I called it an act of solidarity and moral duty. Because that is what it is. I want you to know that the WHO’s request to Spain was not made arbitrarily. It was made in full accordance with the International Health Regulations, the legally binding framework that defines the rights and obligations of countries and the WHO when responding to public health events of international concern. Under those rules, the nearest port with sufficient medical capacity must be identified to ensure the safety and dignity of those on board. Tenerife met that standard. Spain honoured it. Nearly 150 people from 23 countries have been at sea for weeks, some of them grieving, all of them frightened, all of them longing for home. Tenerife has been chosen because it has the medical capacity, the infrastructure, and the humanity to help them reach safety. And because I believe that so deeply, I will be there myself. I intend to travel to Tenerife to observe this operation firsthand, to stand alongside the health workers, port staff, and officials who are making it happen, and to personally pay my respects to an island that has responded to a difficult situation with grace, solidarity, and compassion. Your humanity deserves to be witnessed, not just acknowledged from a distance. As I have said many times: viruses do not care about politics, and they do not respect borders. The best immunity any of us has is solidarity. Tenerife is demonstrating that solidarity today. The ship’s captain, Jan Dobrogowski, crew and the company operating the vessel have shown exemplary collaboration at this challenging time. On behalf of the World Health Organization, and on behalf of those passengers and their families around the world, I thank the people of Tenerife and everyone else involved. Please take care of yourselves and of each other. Trust in the preparations that have been made. And know that the WHO stands with you, and with every person on that ship, every step of the way. With respect, care, and gratitude, Tedros

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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
For many residents in Getso, Kano State, the challenge is no longer just access to healthcare, but whether community voices are being heard at all. This week’s #CommunityHealthWatch report explores how an inactive Ward Development Committee (WDC) is leaving critical gaps in accountability, coordination, and primary healthcare delivery unresolved. Read: bit.ly/4wAadXF
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
Better health communication starts with listening. Your feedback will help shape how Nigeria Health Watch continues to provide informed commentary, intelligence, and insights on Nigeria’s health sector. Complete our short survey here: surveymonkey.com/r/MZ2MF95
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Peter Anwuli retweetledi
Nigeria Health Watch
Nigeria Health Watch@nighealthwatch·
#NHWQUOTEOFTHEWEEK Africa’s health future cannot depend indefinitely on external systems, funding, or emergency responses. Building resilient local institutions, investing in research, and strengthening public health leadership are critical to achieving true health sovereignty across the continent.
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