GFO Issue 117, Article Number: 3
Every day, programmes supported by the Global Fund save at least 3,600 lives, and there has been a dramatic increase in the volume of services delivered. These are two of the highlights of "The Global Fund 2010: Innovation and Impact," a report on results achieved which was released by the Global Fund on 8 March 2010. The Global Fund estimates that the cumulative number of lives saved from the Fund's start in 2002 until the end of 2009 was 4.9 million.
Up to 31 December 2009, the Global Fund had approved proposals worth $19.2 billion and had disbursed $10 billion. Programmes financed by the Fund were providing antiretroviral therapy (ART) to 2.5 million people; were providing TB treatment to six million people; and had distributed 104 million insecticide-treated bed nets. Additional information on results for these and other services can be found in Table 4, below.
ART = antiretroviral therapy / ITNs = Insecticide-treated bed nets
LLINs = long-lasting insecticide-treated bed nets
PMTCT = prevention of mother-to-child transmission
1Â The results are cumulative from 2002, when the Global Fund was established. Results reported in a year do not necessarily correspond to actual services provided during that year, since grant reporting cycles do not always follow calendar years.
2Â "Services provided" refers to the number of times individuals were provided with this service. (Some individuals are provided services more than once.)
3Â "Person-episodes of training" is a cumulative figure that multiplies the number of persons attending a training programme by the number of training programmes.
(As indicated above, these results are attributable to programmes supported by the Global Fund. This does not mean that the Global Fund alone can take credit for this; many of these programmes were also supported by national governments and other donors.)
The Global Fund says that every dollar it receives goes to fund in-country programmes because the Fund's operating expenses are almost entirely covered by interest earned on donations. The Fund says that the coming years will see even better results because half of the total disbursements to date by the Global Fund were made in 2008 and 2009 alone. In addition, much of the $5.4 billion of financing approved in the last two rounds of proposals (8 and 9) will reach countries in 2010 and 2011, and will continue to significantly boost health outcomes.
According to the Global Fund, its investments have helped accelerate progress towards a number of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Programmes supported by the Global Fund make a direct contribution to MDG 6 ("Combat HIV/AIDS and malaria and other diseases"). In addition, major contributions have also been made to MDG 4 (on child mortality) and MDG 5 (on maternal mortality) by reducing the largest causes of mortality among women and children. The results report points out that continued, substantial increases in long-term financial commitments by donors will be needed to consolidate the gains and to reach the MDGs by the target date of 2015.
The results report documents numerous instances of positive outcomes in individual countries from Global Fund-supported programmes. For example:
The report also says that important challenges remain. For example, access to ART is still far below universal access levels; MDR-TB, which is difficult and expensive to treat, poses serious public health risks; coverage of HIV prevention is still too low; PMTCT coverage, though improving, lags far behind needs and targets; and weak health systems remain a key challenge to the scale-up of HIV, TB and malaria programmes, and to the attainment of the health MDGs overall.
The Global Fund says that there are "significant challenges to further scaling up prevention and treatment programmes, including barriers to access to treatment for most-at-risk groups, the poor integration of ART and drug dependence services, the lack of an adequate response to TB/HIV co-infections, stigma, ideological barriers (particularly regarding the scaling-up of harm reduction
programmes), laws and regulations or police practices limiting access to evidence-based interventions, and limited access to prevention and treatment services in prisons."
Most of the information for this article comes from "The Global Fund 2010: Innovation and Impact," a 132-page document available at www.theglobalfund.org/en/replenishment/hague/documents. An 8-page summary version is also available (look for "Results Summary 2010," available in English, French and Spanish). The cumulative results to December 2008, shown in Table 4 above, were taken from earlier Global Fund results reports and/or were provided by the Global Fund Secretariat.
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2010-03-18
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