Global Webinar: Accelerating the health equity impact of interventions for infectious diseases in Africa

2 April, 2026

Global Webinar : Accelerating the health equity impact of interventions for infectious diseases in Africa

Infectious disease prevention and control innovations often exacerbate rather than reduce health inequity.

Richer countries and more advantaged groups are better enabled to take advantage of new technologies.

Infectious disease risk and poorer access to health services concentrate among disadvantaged populations.

But these "inverse laws" are not inevitable. Counter-cases are found. The determinants are modifiable.

We are excited to launch the Infectious Disease Equity (InDiE) Consortium —a groundbreaking project funded by Wellcome, dedicated to "Breaking the Inverse Laws" of infectious disease inequality. By bringing together researchers from Zimbabwe, Zambia, The Gambia, South Africa, and Kenya to develop a new equity framework aimed at stopping new technologies from widening the gap in health access.

Join us for our launch webinar!!

Date: 5th May 2026

Time: 14:00-15:30 (UK time)

Free registration

https://lshtm.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Bw0Ekt9UR2i63NIlU0jVbQ

Venue: Online & In-person (for LSHTM staff/students only)

Rm 245 at LSHTM, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH In-person

Co-Chairs:

Professor Clare Bambra and Dr Ngozi Erondu, Co-chairs of the InDiE Consortium International Advisory Group

Speakers:

Professor Richard Cookson, University of York (UK)

The Inverse Care Law: A Global Perspective

Ms Grace Kumwenda, AVAC (Africa Region)

Ending inequitable access to prevention and treatment interventions: A community perspective

Professor Cesar Victora, Federal University of Pelotas (Brazil)

The Inverse Equity Hypothesis: Lessons from the Field

Dr Primrose Matambanadzo, CeSHHAR (Zimbabwe)

The Infectious Disease Equity Consortium

We look forward to welcoming you to the webinar.

Kind regards,

The InDiE Consortium

On behalf of James Hargreaves

Professor of Epidemiology and Evaluation, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

Contact: InDiE@lshtm.ac.uk

Author: 
indie@lshtm.ac.uk