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“Whose Value Counts”: A community perspective on value for money. Liza Tong Programme Manager International HIV/AIDS Alliance. Presentation outline The Alliance Value for money – our approach so far Community mobilisation and growing trends Costing community mobilisation What next?
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“Whose Value Counts”: A community perspective on value for money Liza Tong Programme Manager International HIV/AIDS Alliance
Presentation outline The Alliance Value for money – our approachso far Community mobilisation and growing trends Costing community mobilisation What next? Questions and Discussion
A global partnership of 36 independent linking organisations Secretariat ‘added value’ (as defined by Alliance linking organisations): - knowledge & capacity building, policy influence, resource mobilisation, credibility & prestige and protection
The Alliance model: Mission: supporting community action to prevent HIV infection, meet the challenges of AIDS & build healthier communities :
VFM evolution Costing studies West Africa Pilot SROI India/Zambia VFM definitions mid 2010 Nov 2010 2010-2012
VFM evolution Costing community mobilisation External engagement SROI Cambodia Nov 2011 Jul 2011 2012
Important words of caution concerning community mobilisation and the drive for VFM • Critical to avoid cost savings for donors being achieved at the expense of increased costs for communities. • Community mobilisation should not equate to a reduction in state or donor responsibility, • Governments, donors, and international institutions should include costs and strategies for the remuneration of community members in budgets, programme plans, and technical guidance related to their role • It is vitally important that we understand VFM from a community perspective – in other words better understanding the meaning of whose value (and costs) count
Costing community mobilisation • IHAA lead investigator UNAIDS funded study • To generate more information about the methods to capture and understand cost data for CM within the HIV AIDS response – Little out there exists! • Audience for study : IHAA network, national LOs and their CBO implementing partners, UNAIDS secretariat and COs
What did we do? • Used a common approach (UNAIDS costing toolkit on HIV/AIDS facility level services) adapted for community services • Priced CM within PMTCT, prevention with key populations, Behaviour change • Defined service chain for each area and unit cost /person reached
Top line results of the study • The development of a comparatively low cost methodology for costing community mobilisation that civil society organizations and planners are able to test and apply in other settings • A structure for pricing community mobilisationas it relates to three specific types of HIV programme activities. These included prevention to mother to child transmission (PMTCT); focused prevention with key populations; and behavior change communication (BCC). • Pricing (unit costs per person reached + sample activity costs) of community mobilisationfor PMTCT in Zambia, focus prevention activities with key populations in Cambodia, and BCC in Kenya.
What’s next? • Focus efforts on building capacity for this work in partner organisations • Capturing examples of countries that will integrate costing/cost benefit work into their systems for year on year cost efficiency • Working with countries to maximise the use of this work i.e. KHANA VFM policy brief, Thogomelo SA. SROI research and advocacy