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Sustaining Civil Society’s Role in the HIV Response. Farley R. Cleghorn, MD, MPH Chief Technical Officer Futures Group. July 23, 2014. Photo: Pierre Holtz, UNICEF. C ritical role of CSOs. Photo: West Cape News, Treatment Action Campaign.
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Sustaining Civil Society’s Role in the HIV Response Farley R. Cleghorn, MD, MPH Chief Technical Officer Futures Group July 23, 2014 Photo: Pierre Holtz, UNICEF
Critical role of CSOs • Photo: West Cape News, Treatment Action Campaign • Source: UNAIDS and WHO, “Expanding Access to HIV Treatment through Community-Based Organizations,” accessed at data.unaids.org/publications/irc-pub06/jc1102-expandaccesstohivtreatm_en.pdf in July 2014. • In many countries, laid foundation for national response to HIV • In Burkina Faso and Mali, community-based organizations brought first HIV medicines into country • Powerful advocates for improved access to health care and more affordable treatment • Instrumental in helping reduce HIV-related stigma and discrimination • Key research partners • Pioneers in reaching vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations
Changing aid landscape • Emphasis on transitioning country programs to different levels and types of funding • PEPFAR categories for country recipients • Long-Term Strategy • Targeted Assistance • Technical Collaboration • Co-finance • New category: Country Health Partnerships • Countries have decision-making role in allocation of PEPFAR resources • In the midst of these changes, how do we ensure a strong, sustained role for CSOs? • Source: FY2014 PEPFAR Guidance for Sustainability Planning
Case of Guyana • Illustrates some of the challenges and opportunities in transition • An original PEPFAR focus country that began receiving support in FY2004 • From 2013-2017, PEPFAR Guyana will transition to targeted technical assistance support • Direct funding for service delivery will shift • US government-supported programs will transition to local partners • Anita Datar, Health Policy Project
Sustaining NGOs in Guyana • In Guyana, NGOs deliver: • 25%-50% of programming for people living with HIV • 75%+ for programming for men who have sex with men, sex workers, home-based care, reducing stigma and discrimination, and orphans and vulnerable children • Strong reliance on PEPFAR funds for HIV programming • PEPFAR supported at least 80% of HIV expenditures for 10 out of 15 NGOs profiled by the Health Policy Project • Transition plan will support major needs identified by NGOs • Priority: Capacity strengthening to increase financial, institutional, and programmatic sustainability • Sources: National Composite Policy Index (NCPI); Datar, A., Iyer, P., and Shipley, S. 2013. Supporting PEPFAR Guyana Transition Planning for HIV Prevention, Care, and Support Services in the NGO Sector. Washington, DC: Futures Group, Health Policy Project.
Global issues for CSOs • Sources: Sriskandarajah, Danny, “Why Restricting Foreign Funding of NGOs is Wrongheaded,” retrieved from http://philanthropynews.alliancemagazine.org/2014/04/28/why-restricting-foreign-funding-of-ngos-is-wrongheaded/ in July 2014. Statement by the Government of Uganda on the Anti Homosexuality Act, 2014, issued July 7, 2014 • Restrictions on foreign funding • More than 20 attempts in past two years to restrict foreign funding for NGOs • Stigma, discrimination, and criminalization • CSOs and donors key advocates against harmful laws and actions • New capacity needs and demands among both CSOs and governments Except from recent Ugandan Government statement: “…the Republic of Uganda enacted the Anti Homosexuality Act…with a view to curbing open promotion of homosexuality…However, its enactment has been misinterpreted as a piece of legislation intended to punish and discriminate against people of a “homosexual orientation”, especially among our development partners…The Government…reaffirms that no activities of individuals, groups, companies or organisations will be affected by the Act…”
Promising work: South Africa • Challenge: Health facilities inadequate for meeting demand for condoms and reaching key populations in country’s three highest prevalence provinces • Response: CBOs work with government partners to learn and apply innovative mapping technology to target and expand condom availability • In GertSibande district, CBO and government stakeholders identified and activated more than 1,600 new condom distribution outlets • USAID- and PEPFAR-funded Sexual HIV Prevention Project • Strengthen capacity of CBOs to address programmatic gaps • CBOs forge stronger relationships with government partners • USAID- and PEPFAR-funded Sexual HIV Prevention Project
Honduras: Sustaining NGOs that serve key populations • Technical assistance and performance-based funding provided to NGOs that serve key population groups through USAID- and PEPFAR-funded AIDSTAR-Two project • From 2009 to 2012, the NGOs expanded the reach of their prevention services and met or exceeded their targets • In 2013, the project transferred its know-how, tools, and lessons to the Honduran Health Secretariat • The Health Secretariat has assumed responsibility for contracting non-public providers for delivery of prevention services to key populations • Source: AIDSTAR-Two: Building Civil Society and Other Organizational Capacity for Country-led HIV and AIDS Programs,” Accessed July 2014 from www.msh.org/news-events/stories/aidstar-two-building-civil-society-and-other-organizational-capacity-for-country
Local Capacity Initiative • New effort to increase CSO capacity for policy and advocacy • Reduce legal and policy structural barriers • Reduce stigma and discrimination • Engage key populations in helping plan and implement programs • Sustain their efforts beyond donor funding • Includes at least 17 countries across Africa, Central Asian Republics, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean • CSOs directly funded by OGAC/PEPFAR through local USAID missions and CDC offices • Technical assistance for CSO advocacy and organizational development from USAID- and PEPFAR-funded Health Policy Project and Advancing Partners & Communities Project
Final words • Political and legal environment remains challenging • Multiple levels of advocacy important • CSOs as well as donors • Some maneuvering may be possible despite laws • Ghana: Homosexual acts illegal, but advocacy working group helped convince government to initiate Key Populations Desk to document and respond to rights violations against MSM and other groups • Planned and supported transition processes for CSOs critical • Guyana and Honduras promising models • Capacity needs exist among both CSOs and government • CSOs as research partners for assessing needs and results • New Health Policy Project activity: supporting ethical transitions for key population programming