Health Equity for me: Jean Paul Enamao
The fifteenth story in our 15-part Health Equity Video Series

Around the world, communities fight every day for fair and equal health services. In this 15-part video series, GFAN advocates, and community leaders share what health equity means to them and why fully funding the Global Fund is critical to achieving it.
“Health equity for me means that we all deserve good quality health care services, regardless of who we are, where we live, or whether we are women, men, or sexual and gender minorities — we all deserve essential, good quality health services.”
For Jean Paul Enamao from Senegal, health equity is about dignity, fairness, and inclusion. His message highlights that everyone — no matter their identity or background — has the right to accessible, high-quality healthcare. Ensuring that right for all is at the heart of the Global Fund’s mission and of the global movement for health equity.
With this final video, our series comes full circle: from Indonesia to Lebanon, Mongolia to France, fifteen voices have shown how communities around the world are driving progress toward health equity. Their messages are a powerful call to sustain and expand the Global Fund — because only through shared commitment and full funding can no one be left behind.
