As Global Fund multi-country grants enter a new phase, we map all ongoing and planned regional and multi-country grants
Author:
Charlie Baran
Article Type:Article Number: 7
There will be 16-19 multi-country grants from 2017-2019 catalytic funding; and there are 24 active regional grants from 2014-2016
ABSTRACT There will be 16ā19 multi-country grants from catalytic funding for 2017ā2019, fewer than the 24 regional grants from 2014ā2016 that are still active. We provide a mapping.
As one of the core streams of its catalytic investments (see GFO article), the Global Fund has allocated $260 million for multi-country approaches for the 2017ā2019 funding cycle. According to a Guidance Note prepared by the Fund, āthe objective of multi-country approaches is to target a limited number of key, strategic multi-country priorities deemed critical to meet the aims of the Strategy and not able to be addressed through country allocations.ā
The Global Fund Secretariat spent the first half of 2017 reviewing and holding consultations on where and how best to spend the budget for multi-country approaches. Operationalization of the program was approved in July 2017. Explanatory materials available on the Global Fund website include the Guidance Note and Frequently Asked Questions.
Note on terminology
In this article, we refer to grants covering several countries in the same region, approved in the 2014ā2016 funding cycle, as āregional grantsāāā which is what they were called at the time āā and to similar grants being approved in the 2017ā2019 funding cycle as āmulti-country grants,ā which is the terminology currently being used by the Global Fund. Note that we have excluded from this round-up the multi-country grants that encompass small island states like the Caribbean and the Western Pacific, or otherwise use pooled country allocation funding for operational purposes, such as the Middle East Response grant. |
There are two types of multi-country grants: those that are pre-identified (pre-ID) āā i.e. with pre-identified objectives and principal recipients (PR); and those that emerge from a competitive application process. An example of a pre-identified multi-country grant is the initiative to eliminate multi-drug-resistant malaria in the Greater Mekong region of Southeast Asia. The grant has a pre-defined objective and eligible countries (Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam), as well as a pre-identified PR: UNOPS. Competitive multi-country grants are those that target a priority and a specific region, but where the specific countries included, and the implementation arrangements, are not pre-defined by the Fund. Examples of these include most of the regional key populationāfocused programs and most of the TB multi-country grants.
One important note regarding the transition from the 2014ā2016 funding cycle to 2017ā2019 is that regional grants will not typically be renewed. The only instances in which regional grants will be renewed are where they that have a theme which has been selected for the new cycle and where the applicant is pre-identified by the Fund. An example of this is the TB in mining multi-country grant in Southern Africa (see GFO article for details).
Aidspan has become aware that there is some confusion regarding multi-country programs. This isnāt hard to understand, given the flux over the years in the Fundās approach to regional programs and the sheer number and variety of initiatives. To help readers understand the full picture, Aidspan has prepared the following mapping of existing and expected multi-country grants and ongoing regional grants.
Overview of multi-country grants for 2017ā2019
The Global Fundās multi-country approaches are aligned with three strategic priorities: one each for malaria, TB, and HIV, each with designated funding (See Table 1).
Table 1: Multi-country strategic priorities for 2017ā2019
Component | Priority | Funding ($ million) |
Malaria | Malaria elimination in low burden countries | 145 m |
TB | Finding the missed people with TB | 65 m |
HIV | Sustainability of services for key populations | 50 m |
TOTAL | 260 m |
Source: Guidance Note: Multicountry Approach in the Global Fundās 2017ā2019 Funding Cycle
In an earlier vision for multi-country grants, $12 million was included for resilient and sustainable systems for health, but this has been reprogrammed to the strategic initiatives stream within catalytic investments.
Within each disease priority, there are several sub-priority areas (a total of 14 across the three diseases). (āSub-priorityā is a term adopted by Aidspan for this article, to avoid confusion. In its materials, the Fund refers to priorities at both levels simply as āpriorities.ā)
The sub-priorities form the basis for grants; most sub-priorities will have one grant each. The total number of planned multi-country grants (16ā19) is considerably less than the number of regional grants from the previous cycle. The Fund has intentionally reduced the number, so as āto focus on those that are essential to the delivery of the Strategy,ā according to a spokesperson for the Fund. Table 2 provides information on all planned multi-country grants for the 2017ā2019 funding cycle. Applications for about half of the pre-ID grants have already been submitted, while requests for proposals (RFPs) for all of the competitive grants have either been issued or are expected to be issued sometime during the balance of 2018. Links to RFPs that have been issued are included in the table.
Table 2: 2017ā2019 Multi-country grants information
Disease | Sub-priority | Application approach (# of grants) |
Expected submission timing | Sub-priority funding ceiling ($ million) |
Malaria | 1. Elimination of malaria in Mesoamerica and Hispaniola | Pre-ID (1) | Complete | 6.0 m |
2. Elimination of malaria in South Africa | Pre-ID (1-2) | Apr 2018 or later | 20.0 m | |
3. Elimination of malaria multi-drug resistance in Greater Mekong (RAI) | Pre-ID (1) | Complete; being impl. | 119.0 m | |
TB | 4. TB in mining, Southern Africa | Pre-ID (1) | Complete; being impl. | 22.5 m |
5. Supranational labs in Eastern and Southern Africa | Pre-ID (1) | Apr or Aug 2018 | 4.5 m | |
6. Improving quality of care and prevention for MDR-TB in Eastern Europe (See RFP) | RFP (1) | Apr 2018 | 5.0 m | |
7. Support LAC countries transitioning from Global Fund TB funding | RFP (1) | Aug 2018 | 4.5 m | |
8. Interventions among refugees in East Africa (See RFP) | RFP (1) | AprĀ 2018 | 7.5 M | |
9. Supranational lab in Western and Central Africa (See RFP) | RFP (1) | Apr 2018 | 6.0 M | |
10. TB/MDR-TB interventions mobile pop. in Asia; Afghan (See RFP) and Greater Mekong (See RFP) | 2 RFPs (2) | Apr 2018 | 5.0 m Afghan; 10.0 m Mekong |
|
HIV | 11. Sustainability of service for KPs in LAC region | 2 RFPs (2-3) | Aug 2018 | 10.5 m LAC; 6.5 m Carib. |
12. Sustainability of service for KPs in EECA region (See RFP) | RFP (1-2) | Apr 2018 | 13.0 m | |
13. Sustainability of service for KPs in Southeast Asia region | Pre-ID (1) | Aug 2018 | 12.5 m | |
14. Sustainability of service for KPs in MENA region (See RFP) | RFP (1) | Apr 2018 | 7.5 m |
For details on each sub-priority, please see the Global Fundās Guidance Note.
Ongoing regional grants
There are 24 active regional grants funded through the previous 2014ā2016 cycle. Their implementation stages range from first to final years. In addition to the regional grants, there are a number of multi-country grants which were not classified by the Fund as āregional,ā which are excluded from the tally below. See theĀ Note on terminology above for details.
One major difference between the 2017ā2019 funding cycle and 2014ā2016 is that there are no multi-country HIV grants available for sub-Saharan Africa in the current cycle, whereas about half of all regional HIV grants were in sub-Saharan Africa previously; see GFO article for more details on that decision. Tables 3ā6 list all of the regional grants that are ongoing at this time.
Table 3. Sub-Saharan Africa regional grants
Disease | Grant title | Principal recipient | End date | Countries included |
Malaria | MOSASWA Cross-border initiative | Lubombo Spatial Dev. Initiative 2 | Dec 2019 | Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland |
Malaria | Malaria Elimination in Southern Africa (Elimination 8) | Non-Profit Association “Southern Africa Malaria Elimination Eight Initiative Sect.” | Sep 2018 | Botswana, Swaziland, Namibia, South Africa, Angola, Mozambique, Zambia, Zimbabwe |
TB/HIV | Contribute to reduction of new HIV infections, TB incidence & HIV/TB related morbidity & mortality among cross border and mobile population in IGAD member countries | Intergovernmental Authority on Development | Mar 2019 | Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan and Uganda |
TB/HIV | Improving HIV/TB/Hepatitis harm reduction services and promotion of human rights of People who Inject Drugs in 5 West African countries | RO Alliance Nationale Contre le Sida (ANCS) | Dec 2019 | SĆ©nĆ©gal, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, CĆ“te dāIvoire and Guinea Bissau |
TB | Supporting Uganda SRL and other Countries to Improve TB diagnosis in the ECSA Region | East, Central and Southern Africa Health Community | Oct 2019 | Botswana, Burundi, Eritrea, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Seychelles, Somalia, S. Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe |
HIV | Creating community treatment observatories in 11 West African countries | International Treatment Preparedness Coalition | Dec 2019 | Benin, C.I., Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-B., Liberia, Mali, SƩnƩgal, Sierra Leone, Togo |
HIV | VIH et Handicap en Afrique de lāOuest | Handicap International Federation | Dec 2019 | B. Faso, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Niger, Mali, SĆ©nĆ©gal |
HIV | ANECCA Regional Project for Catalysing Improvement of Care, Tr. and Support for Children and Adolescents Living with HIV in Africa | African Network for the Care of Children Affected by HIV/AIDS | Oct 2018 | Burundi, Ethiopia, Malawi, Nigeria, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda |
HIV | KP Reach | Humanist Institute for Co-op. with Developing Countries (HIVOS) | Dec 2018 | Botswana, C.I., Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, SƩnƩgal, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia |
HIV | Africa Regional Grant – Removing Legal Barriers | UNDP | Dec 2018 | Botswana, C.I., Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, SĆ©nĆ©gal, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia |
HIV | HIV and Harm Reduction in Eastern Africa | Kenya AIDS NGOs Consortium | Sep 2018 | Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mauritius, Seychelles, Tanzania (including Zanzibar), Uganda |
HIV | ALCO HIV/AIDS prevention project targeting keys & vulnerable pop. along the Abidjan-Lagos Corridor | Abidjan-Lagos Corridor Organization | Dec 2018 | CĆ“te dāIvoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria |
Table 4: Latin America and the Caribbean regional grants
Disease | Grant title | Principal recipient | End date | Countries included |
TB | Strengthening of the TB laboratory Network in the Americas | Organismo Andino de Salud – Convenio HipĆ³lito Unanue | Dec 2019 | Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, C.R., Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Dom. Rep., Uruguay, Venezuela |
HIV | Removing Barriers to accessing HIV and sexual and reproductive health services for key populations in the Caribbean | Caribbean Community Secretariat (CARICOM) | Sep 2019 | Antigua & Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Dom. Rep., Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts & Nevis, Saint Lucia, St. Vincent & G., Suriname, Trinidad & Tobago |
HIV | Challenging stigma and discr. to improve access to and quality of HIV services in the Caribbean | UNDP | SepĀ 2019 | Belize, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago |
HIV | Secretaria de la Integracion Social Centroamericana | Secretaria de la Integracion Social Centroamericana | Jun 2019 | Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama |
HIV | Trans women without borders against transphobia and HIV/AIDS | International Organization for Migration | Mar 2019 | Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Uruguay |
HIV | Acelerando la accion reg. a favor de los Der. Humanos, Sexuales y Reproductivos y la No Violencia hacia las Mujeres con VIH | Humanist Institute for Co-operation with Developing Countries (HIVOS) | Dec 2018 | Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama, Peru, Dominican Republic |
Table 5: Eastern Europe and Central Asia regional grants
Disease | Grant title | Principal recipient | End date | Countries included |
TB | Decreasing the burden of tuberculosis disease and halting the spread of drug resistance in eleven EECA countries through increasing political commitment and translating evidence into implementation of patient-centered TB models of care | Center for Health Policies and Studies | Dec 2018 | Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine |
HIV | Right to Health: Community Actions to Increase Access of MSM and Transgender People to HIV Services in C. and E. Europe and C. Asia | Eurasian Coalition on Male Health | Dec 2019 | Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Macedonia |
HIV | Enhancing effectiveness, accessibility, sustainability and scale up of HIV treatment programs in the EECA region with special emphasis on key populations | ICO East Europe and Central Asia Union of People Living with HIV | Oct 2018 | Moldova, Georgia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Russian Fed., Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Belarus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Poland |
Table 6: Asia and the Pacific regional grants
Disease | Grant title | Principal recipient | End date | Countries included |
HIV | Evidence based advocacy on community based testing and monitoring of quality services for key populations in seven countries | Save the Children Federation, Inc. | Dec 2020 | Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia, Nepal, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam |
HIV | To increase access to essential HIV and harm reduction services for people who inject drugs in Asia through removing legal barriers, community systems strengthening and increasing the evidence base | India HIV/AIDS Alliance | Dec 2019 | Cambodia, Indonesia, India, Nepal, Philippines, Thailand, Viet Nam |
HIV | Sustainable HIV Financing in Transition (SHIFT) | Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations | Dec 2018 | Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand |