Health campaigns are time-bound, intermittent activities deployed to address specific epidemiological challenges, expediently fill delivery gaps, or provide surge coverageA proportion (%) that reflects the number of people receiving (an) intervention(s) divided by the total number of people eligible to receive for health interventions. Many high-priority health areas use health campaigns as a significant part of their strategy, including neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), malaria, polio and other vaccine-preventable diseases (e.g., measles, yellow fever, typhoid, tetanus, meningitis, HPV), and nutrition (vitamin A). In settings where multiple campaigns occur, planning and implementationImplementation aims to develop strategies for available or new health interventions in order to improve access to, and the use of, these may be carried out with little communication and inadequate coordination among campaigns and/or with country national health programs and communities. This may result in inefficiencies and inequities that can strain health systems, burden health care workers, weaken health services and limit the potential health impact(i) The total, direct and indirect, effects of a programme, service or institution on a health status and overall health and socio‐economic. Until now, there has
been no forum to help identify and promote promising practices across the many and varied health campaigns.
This learning agenda from the Campaign IntegrationThe sharing of all or specific campaign components or functions by a specific program addressing a disease or health need with the Working Group’s November 2020 meeting defines key terms, profiles members, and sets the group’s timeline.