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Beyond Borders: Nigeria’s Voice in Global Health Innovation -By Patrick Iwelunmor

Bloom’s work also has direct relevance for Nigeria’s pursuit of universal health coverage. Strengthening regulatory systems, improving access to quality medicines and building workforce capacity across Africa contribute to domestic health gains. Knowledge from cross country implementation informs national policy, while global partnerships open pathways for funding, research and innovation.

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Professor Chimezie Anyakora

Global partnerships have become the lifeblood of modern health innovation, shaping not only how breakthroughs are developed but how they are sustained and scaled across diverse populations. In an era defined by complex disease burdens, fragile health systems and widening inequities, no single country or institution can operate in isolation. Collaboration across borders enables the pooling of knowledge, resources and technical expertise, ensuring that innovations move beyond laboratories and pilot programmes into real world impact. It is within this interconnected framework that meaningful progress towards universal health coverage is achieved, as shared responsibility replaces fragmented efforts and collective action drives lasting change.

The opening of a Geneva office by Bloom Public Health is more than an institutional expansion into the corridors of global influence. It reflects Nigeria’s steady push to reposition itself not as a passive recipient in global health conversations but as a defining voice within them.

On March 5, 2026, at the Global Health Campus in Geneva, Bloom Public Health, led by Professor Chimezie Anyakora, asserted a philosophy that challenges long standing imbalances in global health governance. For decades, decisions have largely been shaped by institutions distant from the realities they seek to address. Africa, despite bearing a disproportionate burden of disease, has often been spoken for rather than listened to. Bloom’s Geneva presence seeks to correct this imbalance.

The symbolism of Bloom Public Health positioning itself within the same ecosystem as the World Health Organization is significant. It signals a transition from the margins to the centre, from implementation to influence. In Professor Anyakora, Nigeria presents not just representation but leadership grounded in experience and a clear understanding of African health systems.

As he noted in his keynote address, “Bloom Public Health exists to strengthen public health systems across Africa through research, policy engagement, capacity development and innovative programme implementation.” Operating across eight African countries, the organisation supports initiatives in health systems strengthening, pharmaceutical systems development and workforce capacity building. These efforts align closely with the pillars of universal health coverage, which depend on access, quality and equity.

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Professor Anyakora further explained that “we have contributed to strengthening regulatory systems, improving access to quality medicines and supporting evidence based health policies across different African settings.” Such interventions address structural weaknesses that have long hindered healthcare delivery in countries like Nigeria, reinforcing the systems required for sustainable and equitable care.

On the rationale for the Geneva expansion, he stated that “the decision to establish a presence in Geneva reflects our strategic commitment to deepen collaboration with global health institutions headquartered in the city.” He added that “Geneva’s concentration of multilateral organisations and international health partnerships provides a unique platform for connecting field based implementation experience with global policy discussions.” This strategic positioning ensures that African realities inform global decision making rather than remain peripheral to it.

At the heart of this effort is a broader ambition. According to him, Bloom Public Health intends “to ensure that African expertise and perspectives play a stronger role in shaping global health priorities and solutions.” This is essential to achieving universal health coverage, which requires context sensitive policies and leadership rooted in lived experience.

The presence of stakeholders such as the Medicines Patent Pool and the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers & Associations reflects a growing recognition that global health progress depends on partnerships that are inclusive, balanced and grounded in mutual respect.

For Nigeria, the implications are profound. The country continues to face challenges in infrastructure, workforce capacity and financing. Yet initiatives such as Bloom’s signal a shift from constraint to contribution. Nigeria is increasingly asserting itself as a source of ideas, expertise and solutions within the global arena.

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This moment should also invite national reflection and pride. The Federal Government ought to recognise and support individuals such as Professor Chimezie Anyakora, whose work elevates Nigeria’s standing globally. His contributions to the United States Pharmacopeia and other international initiatives demonstrate a depth of expertise that positions him as a bridge between global standards and local realities. In championing reforms around medicine quality and regulatory strengthening, he embodies the leadership Nigeria must support to remain relevant in global health conversations.

Bloom’s work also has direct relevance for Nigeria’s pursuit of universal health coverage. Strengthening regulatory systems, improving access to quality medicines and building workforce capacity across Africa contribute to domestic health gains. Knowledge from cross country implementation informs national policy, while global partnerships open pathways for funding, research and innovation.

Moreover, the emphasis on evidence based policy and locally driven solutions ensures that interventions are effective and appropriate. It enhances efficiency, reduces waste and improves outcomes for underserved populations.

As discussions at the launch highlighted, organisations like Bloom Public Health serve as critical bridges between local implementation and global policy. In an increasingly complex health landscape, such integration is essential to translating innovation into measurable impact.

In the final analysis, Bloom Public Health’s Geneva presence represents more than expansion. It reflects a Nigeria that is becoming more intentional about shaping global health discourse. Through Professor Anyakora’s leadership, the country is advancing a compelling case that those closest to the challenges must also be central to the solutions.

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This is how influence is built. Not through rhetoric, but through presence, partnership and purpose. And in that regard, Nigeria’s voice is steadily finding its rightful place at the centre of global health innovation.

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