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FUNDING IN THE AMOUNT OF $224 MILLION APPROVED IN NOVEMBER
GFO Issue 277

FUNDING IN THE AMOUNT OF $224 MILLION APPROVED IN NOVEMBER

Author:

David Garmaise

Article Type:
News

Article Number: 8

For the first time, external funding has been used to fund an initiative on the UQD register

ABSTRACT In the latest wave of funding, 22 grants from 14 countries and one regional organization were approved. This marked the first time that external funding has been used to fund an initiative on the UQD register.

In November 2015, the Global Fund Board approved $224 million in funding for 22 grants emanating from concept notes submitted by 14 countries and one regional organization. The Board was acting on recommendations from the Grant Approvals Committee and the Technical Review Panel.

Included in the $224 million was $16 million in incentive funding. In addition, the Fund placed interventions worth $40 million in the registry of unfunded quality demand. See the table for details.

Most of the funding approvals for individual component were for relatively small amounts. Benin, with three components spanning four grants, received $70 million, far more than any other country. Belarus was second with $26 million. See the table for details.

Table: Funding for country grants approved by the Global Fund, November 2015 ($ million)

Country

(component)

Grant name Principal
recipient
Approved Funding Of which, incentive funding Added to UQD register
Existing New Total
Armenia (HIV) ARM-H-MOH Ministry of Health 0.7 m 3.2 m 3.9 m NIL 5.0 m
ARM-H-MEA Mission East NIL 1.7 m 1.7 m
Azerbaijan (HIV) AZE-H-MOH Ministry of Health 3.6 m 6.3 m 9.9 m NIL NIL
Belarus (HIV) BLR-H-RSPCMT Rep. Scientific Practical

Center of Medical Technology

 

1.7 m 12.0 m 13.7 m NIL 0.2 m
Belarus (TB) BLR-T-RSPCMT 0.4 m 11.9 m 12.3 m NIL NIL
Benin (HIV) BEN-H-BENPLNS Ministry of Health 23.0 m NIL 23.0 m NIL NIL
BEN-H-PlanBen Plan Benin 2.4 m 5.3 m 7.7 m
Benin (Malaria) BEN-M-PNLP Ministry of Health 8.5 m 25.3 m 33.5 m 9.0 m NIL
Benin (TB) BEN-T-PNTUB Ministry of Health 1.5 m 4.9 m 6.4 m 0.4 m NIL
CĆ“te d’Ivoire (Malaria) CIV-M-SCI Save the Children 9.5 m 4.4 m 13.9 m NIL 20.9 m
Dominican Rep. (TB) DOM-T-MSPAS Ministry of Health 0.6 m 7.8 m 8.4 m NIL NIL
El Salvador (TB) SLV-T-MOH Ministry of Health 0.2 m 9.8 m 10.0 m NIL NIL
Gabon (TB) GAM-T-NLTP Ministry of Health NIL 3.9 m 3.9 m NIL NIL
Gambia (TB) GMB-T-NLTP Min. of Health and Social Welfare 1.3 m 6.7 m 8.0 m 0.4 m NIL
Regional (HIV) QRA-H-HIVOS ICW Latina NIL 4.3 m 4.3 m NIL NIL
Jamaica (HIV) JAM-H-MOH Ministry of Health 0.3 m 14.9 m 15.2 m NIL NIL
Paraguay (TB) PRY-T-AVA Alter Vida 0.4 m 5.6 m 6.0 m NIL NIL
Tajikistan (TB) TJK-T-HOPE Project HOPE 4.7 m 8.6 m 13.3 m NIL NIL
TJK-T-RCTC Republican Center of TB Control NIL 4.7 m 4.7 m
Timor-Leste (TB) TLS-708-G04-T Ministry of Health 0.6 m 4.2 m 4.8 m 0.9 m NIL
Timor-Leste (HIV) TLS-H-MOH Ministry of Health 3.9 m 0.4 m 4.3 m NIL NIL
Vietnam (Malaria) VNM-M-NIMPE National Institute of Malariology, Parasitology & Entomology 2.8 m 12.5 m 15.3 m 4.8 m 13.5 m
TOTALS 66.1 m 158.1 m 224.2 m 15.5 m 39.6 m

The grants to Benin, CĆ“te dā€™Ivoire and Gabon were in euros which we converted to dollars at the rate of 1.0720.Ā Discrepancies in totals due to rounding.

In addition to the $224 million, the Board approved $31.3 million for Zimbabweā€™s HIV component, made up of $25.3 million in incentive funding, and $6.2 million specifically to support the provision of pediatric ARVs and related initiatives. As an early NFM applicant, Zimbabwe did not have an opportunity to compete for incentive funding. Thus, the country coordinating mechanismĀ was allowed to submit a request for funds specifically from the incentive funding envelope.

The pediatric initiatives are being funded by the Childrenā€™s Investment Fund Foundation. The initiatives the CIFF will support were on the register of unfunded quality demand.Ā This represents the first time that an initiative from the UQD register has been funded with money from a source external to the Global Fund.

Because of perceived risks, the funding award to Jamaica was accompanied by a special condition in the grant confirmation form requiring the submission of a detailed annual report on compliance with essential health product absorption commitments, including antiretroviral expenditures and management.

The Board also approved exceptions to existing policies to make it easier to manage grants in challenging operating environments in Iraq, Palestine, Syria and Yemen (seeĀ GFO article.)

Regional grant

The strategic focus of the regional grant to be administered by ICW (International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS) Latina is ā€œto position women living with HIV in 11 Latin American countries as a key population in the effort to contain and reverse HIV, and empower them as actors who are trained to defend their human rights in their communities.ā€

Included in the programā€™s strategies are (a) advocacy at the regional and national level, including the development of an online tool to track regulatory and policy frameworks related to the rights of women living with HIV; and (b) capacity building of women living with HIV. The latter will entail development of a methodological toolkit that focuses on gender-based violence, human rights, and exercise of citizenship; and transformational leadership workshops for the ICW Latina network.

Funding for key populations and harm reduction in HIV awards

Services for key populations were contained in eight HIV components. Specifically, services for men who have sex with men were included in four components; for persons who inject drugs in four; for sex workers in three; for people in prisons in three; and for transgender people in two.

Armenia plans to provide methadone substitution both inside and outside of prisons. In Azerbaijan, needle exchange programs will be scaled up. In Belarus, opioid substitution therapy and needle exchange are among the services to be provided.

Among the strategies included in the HIV grants to Benin are (a) programs addressing gender violence and removing legal barriers through policy and legal advocacy; and (b) providing psychological, legal, and microcredit economic support to people living with HIV, orphans and vulnerable children, and key populations.

One of the strategies identified in the report is innovative approaches to reaching young women and girls.

Funding for malaria: highlights

The Board approved minor additional funding for two malaria components that had already been awarded funding under the NFM: Bangladesh and CĆ“te dā€™Ivoire. For one Bangladesh grant, BGD-M-BRAC, the approved grant budget was raised from $9.7 million to $9.8 million. For a second grant from that country, BGD-M-NMCP, the approved budget went from $15.7 million toĀ $15.9 million. The GAC said that the additional amounts are within the allocations, and represent the reinvestment of undisbursed and unused cash funds from Round 10 grants that were not included in the total budget when the Board approvedĀ funding for the Bangladesh malaria grants in June 2015. According to the GAC, the CCM has requested that the additional amounts be invested in initiatives on the UQD register.

For CĆ“te dā€™Ivoire, the approved budget for grant CIV-M-MOH was increased from $83.5 billion to $88.4 billion. GFO is planning to provide additional details on the increase in a separate article.

The GAC report noted that in Benin, spot checks of a sample of 140 vendors in markets and streets revealed that up to 50% are selling counterfeit or substandard artemisinin combination therapies. Given that a high proportion of the population obtains services from the private sector, Benin will use efficiencies identified in the budget for the malaria grant during grant-making to support current efforts to address this problem involving Beninā€™s drug regulatory agency, and partners such as USAID and the (U.S.) Presidentā€™s Malaria Initiative.

With respect to malaria grant for Vietnam, the Global Fund will phase out contributions to salary incentives by the end of 2015, and will support only a travel allowances for village health workers, which is considered critical for active case finding efforts.

Funding for TB: highlights

With respect to the TB funding for Gabon, a key strategy for providing services to key populations involves the use of community agents to provide patient support, including patient follow-up, psycho-social services and peer training for other community agents.

Some of the funding awarded to the Gambia TB component will be used for programs to retain and build the capacities of health workers and technicians.

Sustainability

The GAC report briefly described steps that were taken in nine of the 22 country grants to strengthen the sustainability of programs currently supported by the Global Fund (seeĀ GFO article).

Information for this article comes from the November 2016 report of the Secretariatā€™s Grant Approvals Committee to the Board (GF-B33-ER18). This document is not available on the Fundā€™s website.Ā 

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