Title: HIV, Public Health and Development
1HIV, Public Health and Development
- A Question of Balance
- VK Barbiero, PhD, MHS
- George Washington University
- 202-416-0097
- vkb_at_gwu.edu
2Missed Opportunities
- He who refuses to embrace a unique opportunity
loses the prize as surely as if he had failed.
William James - A missed opportunity in public health is
inexcusable and the ultimate responsibility of
all public health professionals vkb
3On Equality
I believe in equality for everyone, except
reporters and photographers. Mohandas K.
Gandhi
4Making Sense
- many other public health needs in developing
countries are being ignored. - The fact is, spending 50 billion or more on
foreign health assistance makes sense, but only
if it is not limited to HIV/AIDS programs. - Daniel Halperin 1/1/08
5The 600lb Gorilla in the Room
Which one do we want?
6HIV Facts and Figures
- Global HIV Infections 33M (40m)
- HIV Annual Deaths 2.5M (3.0m)
- Non-HIV
- Investments DO NOT balance with need
- HIV can be a development engine or a development
impediment - Balanced investments are imperative for
successful health foreign assistance including
HIV /AIDS prevention, care and treatment
7Global Success National Programs, GFATM PEPFAR
Source PEPFAR, 2008. Power of Partnerships
http//www.pepfar.gov/press/95911.htm
8PEPFARs Impressive Results
- 1,445,500 men, women and children treated with
ARVs (1,358,500 in Focus Countries) - Prevention of MTCT to more than 10 million
pregnant mothers - ARVs to 827,000 women
- 157,000 infant infections prevented
- 61.5 million reached through community outreach
- 520,000 trained or retrained
- 4,863 service outlets and 3,848 blood safety
outlets supported
Source PEPFAR, 2007. http//www.pepfar.gov/about
/c19785.htm
9The HIV/AIDS Dilemma
- The power of HIV programming is impressive
- Success is clearly demonstrated
- Millions have been saved and protected
- BUT
- What of the opportunity costs
- What of the impact on other development programs?
- What of the pull of staff, resources, time,
effort?
10Approximately 9.7 Million Children Die Annually
(70 From 5 Major Causes)
Undernutrition 36-56
Birth Trauma Neonatal Deaths Tetanus Fever Low
Birth Weight
Source Lopez, et. al., 2006
11AIDS/TB/Malaria Child Mortality
- Child Deaths from AIDS 3-500,000
- Child Deaths from TB 0
- Child Deaths from Malaria 1,500,000
- Total Child Deaths ATM 2,000,000
- Total
- Total Child Deaths ATM 2,000,000
_________ - Deaths Remaining 7,700,000
12HIV and Public Health - Overview
- Comparative annual resources 5B vs 1B
- Balance of investments - out of whack
- Objectives and outcomes to confined
- Impacts - Millions of PLWAs saved
- Outcomes HIV prevention weak
- Lost opportunities - millions of children still
die - Opportunity potential millions more lives could
be saved
13Balancing PCT
- Globally, treatment has been successful
- Care both for adults and vulnerable children has
expanded - Prevention remains problematic
- estimates of infections averted are difficult
- HIVs natural history requires personal
perception of risk - Circumcision holds promise, but is difficult to
deliver - ABC is a solid strategy, but is limited by its
vertical nature - Revised balance with PCT is in order
14Presidents 2009 Budget RequestSubmitted
February 9, 2008
Total Budget 3.1 Trillion 39B/3.1T
1.26 7.1B/39B 17.9 18x1.26 0.23 of
Total Budget for Global Health!
Billions of USD
HIV 5B/year 2008 Up to 10B/yr 2009
Source Global Health Council, 2008, vkb, 2008,
extrapolation
15Acute Infection
Mathematical models estimate the average
probability of malefemale transmission of HIV-1
per unprotected coital act to be between 0.0005
and 0.003 during chronic HIV infection, which in
itself would not sustain an epidemic. -Pao
et al, AIDS (2005)
16(No Transcript)
17Total US Contribution HIV/AIDS
18.8B since 2004
Source PEPFAR, 2008. http//www.pepfar.gov/press
/80064.htm
18USG Global Health FundingFY 2007
Source www.thomas.gov/, GHC, 2007, PEPFAR, 2008
19Kenya PEPFAR Approved FY 2007 Funding
Source PEPFAR, 2008. http//www.pepfar.gov/abou
t/82463.htm
20USAID Program Account Summaries FY 2007
Millions USD
Source USAID, 2007. USAID Budget
usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2007/
21Verticality and Sustainability
- The lessons are clear
- Smallpox eradication
- Twin engines (ORS/UCI)
- Polio eradication
- Vitamin A campaigns
- TB control
- HIV PCT
- Need to balance results with sustainability
- Understand the opportunity costs
- Do the right things
22Monthly Incidence of Polio In India January 1998
January 2007
Number of cases
NID
NID
NID
NID
NID
NID
SNID
SNID
SNID
SNID
NID
Mop-up
NID
SNID
NID
SNID
SNID
SNID
NID
SNID
NID
5 SNIDS 2NIDS In 2006
1998
1999
2000
2004
2001
2002
2003
2005
2006
2007
NID National Immunization Day
SNID Sub-National Immunization Day
Large scale mop-up
data as on 23rd March 2007
23The Vertical DilemmaPolio and Routine
Coverage - India
Percent Immunization Coverage
92-93 98-99 05-06
Source NFHS-3, 2007
24Childhood Deaths in India
Total Worldwide Total
Source UNICEF State of the Worlds Children,
2008 India NHFW Survey, 2007
25PEPFARs Past Perception
Development
Health
AIDS
PEPFAR
With all respectthis is wrong
26The Solutions
- De-Verticalize HIV/AIDS programs
- Use PEPFAR resources more broadly
- Identify investment synergies and mutual impact
between HIV and other system structures - Have indicators reflect broader, integrated
investments - Invest in a bold vision that will achieve
HIV/AIDS objectives AND reduce other causes of
mortality and morbidity
27SystemsThe Deal-breaker
FP/RH
HIV Wing
Maternity
MCH
TYPICAL HEALTH CENTER
TB
EPI
Dispensary
Improved HIV PCT
Low Client Draw Improved HIV/AIDS
Services Limited MCH/FP/RH Services
28SystemsThe Deal-Maker!!
FP/RH
HIV Wing
Maternity
MCH
TB
EPI
TYPICAL HEALTH CENTER
Dispensary
Improved HIV PCT AND Improved Community Health
High Client Draw Increased HIV/AIDS
Services Increased MCH/FP/RH Services
29Program SynergiesHIV PMI AND MCH/RH/FP
HIV HIV Prevention VCT Treatment OVC/Care Blood
Safety NACP Support HRD/Tech Training Commodities
PMI ITNs IPT Treatment HRD/Tech Training Applied
Research Other
HMIS/ME Infrastructure Logistics/SCM Commodities
Equip/Supplies Mgt Efficiencies Policy
Dialogue HRD/Tech Training
MCH/RH/FP Commodities HRD/Tech Training Technical
Intervention Safe Delivery Reduced Maternal
Deaths
30The Lantos-Hyde Bill Language
- Section 4(6)(A)
- Sec. 4. PURPOSE.
- (6) helping partners to
- (A) strengthen health systems
- Title III Subtitle A Section 301(b)(1)(B)
- Title III - Bilateral Efforts
- Subtitle A - General Assistance Programs
- (b) Policy
- (1) Objectives
- (B) strengthen the capacity to deliver primary
health care in developing countries, especially
in sub-Saharan Africa
31New Appropriation Language for PEPFAR
- In addition to increasing the stated objectives
of treatment, care and prevention for HIV/AIDS,
up to 20 of PEPFAR resources will be used to
reduce child and maternal mortality by at least
15 in PEPFAR and Non-PEPFAR countries. - Specifically, PEPFAR will directly reduce
diarrheal disease, immunizable diseases and
neonatal/perinatal causes such as trauma, fever,
tetanus, and hypothermia.
32New Appropriation Language for PEPFAR
- Specifically, PEPFAR will reduce
pregnancy-related deaths for women through
improved reproductive health service delivery,
appropriate management of pregnancy and labor,
improved girls and maternal nutrition and
improved girls education.
33Responsible Programming
- Put the big three in perspective
- HIV/AIDS is one of many public health issues that
requires attention - We have excellent tools to prevent millions of
child deaths annually - We cannot continue to verticalize health
assistance - Lantos-Hyde Leadership Bill Appropriations MUST
embrace a bold vision
34Conclusion
- Leaders do the right thing
- Lets save 9.7 million children as well as 2.1
million PLWAs each year - Morally, technically and politically we cannot
afford to triage the lives of millions of
children and thousands of mothers worldwide - Maximizing this opportunity is our duty
- Change is in the airthe time is now
- It is time to lead!
35Thank You