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Collaborative TB/HIV activities 2002/2003 Preliminary analysis of progress in highest burden countries Alasdair Reid THD Unit, Stop TB department WHO Geneva. GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP TO STOP TB. ProTEST Results. Questionnaire development. Interim Policy. Guide to M&E. Development process.
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Collaborative TB/HIV activities 2002/2003 Preliminary analysis of progress in highest burden countries Alasdair Reid THD Unit, Stop TB department WHO Geneva GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP TO STOP TB
Questionnaire development • Interim Policy • Guide to M&E
Development process • Regional offices • Technical consultants • Programme managers • French and English versions in Word and Excel format distributed to country programme staff through ROs to WRs and COs and programme managers.
Distribution • AFRO (28) Angola, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, DR Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Swaziland, Togo, Uganda, UR Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe. • AMRO/PAHO (2)Brazil, Haiti • EMRO (2)Djibouti, Sudan • EURO (2)Russian Federation, Ukraine • SEARO (4)India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Thailand • WPRO (3)Cambodia, China, Viet Nam
Questionnaire content • TB and HIV policy analysis • Coordination and planning of TB/HIV activities • Which activities were included in national policy • How many districts were implementing activities in national policy • Number accessing interventions
Results • 65 questionnaires returned in total • 31 countries 2002 and 2003 • 3 countries - one year only • 27/28 from AFRO • SEARO – recent similar exercise • Preliminary analysis • Some data not validated
National Policy- reducing the burden of HIV in those with TB
Geographical Coverage (%)- reducing the burden of HIV in those with TB
Summary • Inclusion of TB/HIV in policies, plans and strategies of both TB and HIV programmes increasing • Joint planning increasing • High level advocacy still needed
Summary • Implementation is progressing • Coverage remains low • Few data yet being generated on outputs and outcomes of collaborative TB/HIV activities • M&E systems need to be strengthened to be able to capture and report this information • To identify problems, demonstrate success and improve programmes and health
Acknowledgements • Hemanthi Dassanayake • Jeroen van Gorkom, Pierpaolo de Colombani • TB/HIV and TME teams • RO and CO staff and country programme staff • Oumou Bah-Sow, Saidi Egwaga,Paula Fujiwara,Jesus Garcia Calleja, Philippe Glaziou, Riita Dlodlo, Peter Godfrey-Faussett, Pieter van Maaren, Bess Miller, Wilfred Nkhoma, Karen Palmer, Cyril Pervilhac, Pilar Ramon-Pardo,Bing Wibisono.