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Highlights from the Global Evidence Base PEPFAR Orphans and Vulnerable Children’ Program: Taking Programming to the Next Level for an AIDS Free Generation
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Highlights from the Global Evidence BasePEPFAR Orphans and Vulnerable Children’ Program:Taking Programming to the Next Level for an AIDS Free Generation • Neil Boothby, EdDUnited States Special Advisor for Public Law 109-95 and Senior Coordinator to the USAID Administrator on Children in Adversity
Strategic Directions & The Global Evidence Base I. Start young II. Rebuild Fragile Families III. Protect women and children from violence and exploitation
I. Start Young • Use Early Child Development platform to establish linkages across clinic and community in order to achieve comprehensive outcomes for children – • Ensure survival of young children • Eliminate mother to child transmission • Promote secure attachment and bonding • Protect children from lifelong impacts of “toxic stress”
The Biology of Adversity: Three Levels of Stress Positive Brief increases in heart rate, mild elevations in stress hormone levels. Tolerable Serious, temporary stress responses, buffered by supportive relationships. Toxic Prolonged activation of stress response systems in the absence of protective relationships.
Protection from Toxic Stress Leads to Lifelong Health and Well-being Increased adverse childhood experiences (ACE) correlate with greater HIV risk http://www.cdc.gov/ace
II. Rebuild Fragile Families • Economic stability • Emotional stability and social connectedness • Parenting skills
Evidence: HES & Social Protection • Cash transfers (well established evidence) • Enhance child health, nutrition, growth • Improve school attendance, especially for girls • Increase family consumption, assets, income Adato & Basset 2008. Hagen-Zanker, McCord, & Holmes 2011. DFID 2011. • Savings and money management (emerging evidence) • Reduce erratic/seasonal spending • Stimulate family investment in nutrition, health, education and asset accumulation • Promote goal-setting, planning, future-oriented behavior Rutherford 1999. Collins, Morduch, Rutherford, & Ruthven 2009. Duflo, Kremer, & Robinson 2010. Dupas & Robinson 2011a. Dupas & Robinson 2011b. Barber 2011.
Savings + Parenting Discussion Groups Randomized Controlled Trial in Burundi | Midterm Findings Savings had significant impact on economic wellbeing but did not translate (yet) into better child outcomes: • 4% reduction in poverty • Improved food security • Increased assets (equivalent to 1 cow/family) Savings + parenting showed significant improvements for children: • Substantial reductions in harsh discipline • Improvements in child mental health • Reduced family problems (reported by children) • Improved child wellbeing (reported by children) Bundervoet, Annan & Armstrong 2011.
III. Protect Women and Children from violence and exploitation • Strengthen Child Welfare & Protection Systems • Promote child protection models that encompass both informal and formal systems
High rates of violence against women and children with particular concern for adolescent girls
Weak Formal Protection SystemsHigh Vacancy/High Turnover Rates • South Africa – 50% of social work posts vacant and 50% leave their jobs within 5 years • Malawi – 66% vacancy rate in Department of Social Welfare; 47% vacancy rate in Ministry of Women and Child Development • Lesotho – on average, social workers leave their jobs within 5 years compared to 7 years in the health sector Davis, Rebecca; “Opportunities and Constraints in Human Capacity within Child Welfare Systems: The Social Work Workforce in Africa,” GH TECH, USAID 2010
Poor linkages Between Formal and Informal (Community) Protection Systems • Stark, et. al., “A qualitative study of community-based child protection mechanisms in Aceh, Indonesia”, forthcoming in Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies • Wessells, et. al. “The disconnect between community-based child protection mechanisms and the formal child protection system in rural Sierra Leone: Challenges to building an effective national child protection system”, forthcoming in Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies