USAID SHOPS Trade Fair Promotes Access to Finance and Investment for Private Healthcare Providers

USAID’s Gary Linden and Siana Tackett join Abduljelil Reshad, Mulugeta Asmara, and a NIB bank representative.
USAID’s Gary Linden and Siana Tackett join Abduljelil Reshad from the Ministry of Health; Bank of Abyssinia President Mulugeta Asmara; and a NIB Bank representative at a conference on how to increase access to finance for private sector services.
Nena Terrell, USAID Ethiopia

National Exhibition Brings Together Service Providers, Suppliers, Investors and Lenders

For Immediate Release

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – USAID in cooperation with the Ethiopia Federal Ministry of Health convened a National Private Health Sector Exhibition from December 9-10, 2014, at the Hilton Addis Ababa. Organized by USAID’s Strengthening Health Outcomes through the Private Sector (SHOPS) project with funding from the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the event showcased the contribution of the private health sector and examined future prospects, with a focus on financing for products and services.

This event featured representatives from some of the leading health sector capital investment funds, diaspora investors, and banks on financing for the private health sector. Topics covered directions in health care financing reform in Ethiopia, enabling conditions for increasing access to finance by private health providers, and innovations in financing.

USAID Acting Mission Director Gary Linden in his welcoming remarks noted: “USAID, on behalf of the American people, is proud to be able to join with the Federal Ministry of Health to bring together here those who are committed to building a strong and sustainable health system for Ethiopia, who believe that public-private partnerships are necessary in this time of stretched resources, and who welcome and seek innovative solutions.”

A display of a medical equipment vendor at the Private Health Sector Conference sponsored by USAID and PEPFAR in Ethiopia.
A display of a medical equipment vendor at the Private Health Sector Conference sponsored by USAID and PEPFAR in Ethiopia. The conference goal is to increase finance and investment in the private health sector and increase quality health services.
Nena Terrell, USAID Ethiopia

The two-day event provided a forum on access to finance; established linkages between private health providers, suppliers, and financers, and sustained a national-level dialogue among the private sector, policymakers, and donors on how private health care services can complement Ethiopia’s public health goals for family planning and reproductive health, maternal and child health, and HIV and AIDS and TB prevention and treatment. Participants had an opportunity to visit an array of exhibition booths from major medical equipment vendors, financial institutions, international investors, national and regional health care associations, pharmaceutical producers, health care entrepreneurs, and more.

About SHOPS

The Strengthening Health Outcomes through the Private Sector (SHOPS) project is USAID's global flagship initiative in private sector health. It works with nongovernmental organizations and for-profit entities to increase availability, improve quality, and expand coverage of essential health products and services in family planning and reproductive health, maternal and child health, HIV and AIDS, and other health areas through the private sector. In Ethiopia, SHOPS seeks to increase the use and range of health services by strengthening the business skills and bankability of private health providers, providing technical assistance to banks to increase lending to the private health sector, and funding innovative private sector health.


See Also

Press Release Private Sector Finance Trade Show 12-9-14 [PDF, 28 KB]

Press Release Private Sector Finance Trade Show-Amharic 12-9-14 [PDF, 271 KB]

Acting Mission Director Remarks Private Sector Finance Trade Show 12-9-14 [PDF, 85 KB]

USAID Ethiopia Health Systems

USAID Ethiopia HIV/AIDS