LESSONS LEARNT FROM WINDOW 1 SHOW COUNTRIES STILL GRAPPLE WITH TRANSLATING HIV PROGRAM AMBITIONS INTO GLOBAL FUND FUNDING REQUESTS
Author:
Aidspan
Article Type:Article Number: 0
More guidance than ever is provided; but the number of Annexes and complexity has also increased
The Technical Support Mechanism, UNAIDSās technical assistance provider to countriesā HIV responses, reviewed 15 draft funding requests submitted under Window 1 of the Global Fundās Grant Cycle 7. It is disappointing to note that, despite all the technical guidance provided by the Global Fund and its partners, countries still struggle in designing their funding requests. This review has produced several valuable lessons for countries submitting under Windows 2 and 3 later this year.
Background
One of the ways in which the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS (UNAIDS) provides technical support to countriesā HIV responses is through its Technical Support Mechanism (UNAIDS-TSM). This supports UNAIDS Country Offices and their clients, the countries and beneficiaries themselves, in developing and delivering national HIV programs.
As well as support in many aspects of HIV programming, a significant part is through assistance in funding request development. Countries preparing their Global Fund Grant Cycle 7 (GC7) funding applications can request consultants to lead or draft various components of the funding request and, through the UNAIDS-TSM Virtual Support Desk (VSD) mechanism, UNAIDS-TSM can provide backstopping and technical support, including peer review of deliverables.
Virtual Support Desk
The VSD has three primary functions:
- Virtual review of national strategic plans (NSPs), draft Global Fund applications and other supporting material.
- Ā Virtual support to UNAIDS TSM in-country technical missions, including backstopping and mentoring local consultants, and providing international TA.
- Strategic learning and skill-building.
Under item 1 above, the VSD can coordinate the peer review of draft NSPs, other HIV program ābuilding blocksā (Stigma Indexes, Gender Assessments, HIV programme reviews, etc.) and Global Fund funding request applications for GC7. This is done through leveraging the technical expertise of Joint Programme partners such as the United Nations Population Fund, World Health Organization, etc. The VSD can support funding request preparation and launch phases, as well as the implementation phase; and it can provide thematic expertise (i.e., in HIV prevention, human rights and gender, community-led responses, costing, etc.) as appropriate.
For the review of deliverables, it can harness and consolidate the feedback of multiple peer reviewers including technical experts from the UN Joint Programme.
Secondly, the VSD provides virtual support to UNAIDS TSM in-country technical missions, Identifying the best thematic consultants and coaching local ones. This is done in a number of ways: assignment ākick offā emails and calls to launch both administrative and technical elements of TA; mentoring, backstopping and trouble-shooting if needed during an assignment; and peer review of some or all products on request at any stage of the application process.
The third element of the VSDās work, strategic learning and skill-building, includes Identifying lessons learnt and best practices for replication and sharing; establishing a Community of Practice to provide a resource centre of helpful materials and documentation brought together in one place; and holding webinars and clinics on specific topics, e.g., prioritisation, differentiated service delivery (DSD), community-led responses and monitoring, Global Fund costing and budget tables, etc.
However, probably the most significant aspect of VSDĀ work in 2023 is the opportunity to afford countries to have multiple iterations of their draft funding requests and accompanying annexes reviewed by a broad range of technical and thematic experts.
Key lessons learnt from Window 1 peer reviews
The VSD reviewed 15 draft funding requests, all but one country eventually submitted under Window 1 and one postponed to Window 2. Some countries submitted more than one draft to be reviewed, enabling the VSD to assess whether and to what extent its earlier comments had been taken into account and how the draft had improved between iterations.
General Comments and Red Flags | |
Last-minute requests for peer review imply countries are not well prepared and have started the FR process late |
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Failure to follow the GF instructions/template |
All but two countries did not send in their Performance Frameworks, Gap Tables, Funding Landscapes, Budget, Prioritised Above Allocation Request (PAAR), and/or RSSH Annex: this makes it nearly impossible to comment on consistency across the FR components.
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Failure to submit all related documents/annexes |
Many countriesĀ did not complete their narrative form in compliance with the instructions, resulting in misalignment and garbled language, inconsistencies and rambling text.Ā Following the instructions is key to a relevant, succinct FR.
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Poorly written and organized drafts |
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Weak rationale and consistency |
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Interventions misaligned with budget |
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Use of jargon and meaningless phrases |
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Repetitions in resilient and sustainable systes for health (RSSH) sections, whereas RSSH is cross-cutting |
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One the five funding modalities/approaches, the āTailored for NSPā approach caused the most problems |
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Conclusion
The foregoing is just an example of some of the main lessons learnt from Window 1 draft FRs. A more detailed paper has been prepared on these experiences and it is to be hoped that Window 2 and 3 countries may reap the benefits of some of these earlier lessons. Most countries were unaware of the Technical Review Panelās example of a Full Review HIV/TB Funding request, the fictitious countryĀ Jasmania;Ā this provides a very clear example of what a Full Review Funding Request should look like and is barely 50 pages in length (excluding those 20 annexes, of course!).
It remains to be seen if the lessons learnt are taken into account by the remaining countriesā¦but we shall let you know after Window 2 closes at the end of May!