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Patients TB affected community and Civil society involvement

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... can PACCS effectively contribute to global ACSM/ advocacy for TB control? ... and support PACCS communities for global ACSM: ... does ACSM organize around ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patients TB affected community and Civil society involvement


1
Patients / TB affected community and Civil
society involvement
  • Panel discussion
  • Global Advocacy for Resource Mobilization
    Sub-group
  • Cape Town
  • Monday November 6, 2007
  • 13.30 15.30 hrs.

2
Where does this panel discussion fit
  • Resource mobilization
  • Media, Messaging and Events
  • Supporting Other Working Groups
  • Patients, affected communities and civil society

3
Patients, affected communities and civil
society
  • making sure
  • paccs voice is heard and
  • paccs power is used

4
  • In what respects can PACCS effectively contribute
    to global ACSM/ advocacy for TB control?
  • In what ways can PACCS effectively contribute to
    global ACSM/ advocacy for resource mobilization
  • How do we build and support PACCS communities for
    global ACSM
  • Mobilizing and interconnecting ACSM communities
  • Linking to and utilizing country ACSM networks
  • Equiping country-level ACSM networks

5
Who are these groups
  • Quick brainstorm and identification
  • Patient champions
  • Hiv networks PLWHA
  • Tb patients groups and former patients
  • Indigeneous groups world wide
  • Prison populations
  • Immigrants groups
  • Civil society in high burden countries rich in
    active ngos (involved/potentially) in TB groups
  • Media
  • Professional groups doctors
  • Health workers (nurses association
  • Global NGOs
  • Community-based groups around policy making
    (MDGs), donorbased
  • Religious organizations
  • National and regional partnership

6
Defining patients, affected communities and civil
society
  • Highly diverse and heterogeneous
  • The ears and eyes on country level source of
    information and inspiration
  • The hands and feet on country level
  • can get action going,
  • quick scaling-up and
  • intensifying the advocacy voice at global level

7
What functions do they perform
8
What functions do PACCS perform
  • Service provision
  • Advocacy
  • Prevention
  • Outreach
  • Support groups
  • EDUCATION
  • STRENGTHEN NATIONAL PROGRAMS
  • Monitoring at country level, disbursed and spent
    well
  • Govt accountable
  • Vis-a vis outreach
  • Giving testimony example and inspiration
  • Technical and social input into TB control
    guidelines
  • Linking to the private providers and holding each
    other to standards

9
Positioning Civil vis-á-vis Public- Mutual
reinforcement - Reinforcing standards
10
Objectives of paccs contribution to National TB
control
  • Proper TB control, including
  • Prevention Patient perspective
  • Adherence Quality
  • Overcoming stigma Access
  • Etc
  • Political commitment
  • Reaching the hard to reach and vulnerable
  • Involve all service providers
  • .

11
Translating these PACCS functions to ACSM global
level
  • Proper TB control policies
  • Contributing PACCS perspectives to all other STOP
    TB WG
  • Political commitment
  • PACCS contributing to awareness raising for
    global TB control in international fora
  • PACCS amplifying the call for resources for TB
    control at global and country level
  • Reaching the hard to reach and vulnerable
  • PACCS sharing good practices internationally how
    to access all, how to reach out effectively and
    how to overcome stigma
  • Involve all service providers
  • strengthen links to non-public service providers
    internationally

12
Focus
  • How do we build and strengthen PACSS Networks?
  • For national level roles
  • How do we strengthen their impact?
  • For global acsm strengthening roles

13
Program
  • Engaging civil society for resource mobilization
    Sue Perez, Results
  • Building active networks Pervaiz Tufail
  • Developing patient-led resources Paul Thorn
  • Development of Benchmarks Beatrijs Stikkers,
    KNCV
  • Conclusion

14
Suggested structure
  • Clearly delineate the subject matter
  • Define the priority areas for further work
  • by the global advocacy sub-group
  • and/or ACSM working group
  • Open this up for discussion

15
Engaging civil society for resource mobilization
Sue Perez
  • Actions
  • We need to hear from affected countries -
  • Conceptualize gaps in financing and where to
    apply for funding and for what
  • Demonstrate impact of GR actions
  • More thinking about TB rep on CCMs CS role in
    identifying for CCMs the gaps
  • CS role in knowledge dissemination
  • Need to support NTPs on what to ask
  • HSS and TB how does it link together
  • Need more capacity-building of CS in affected
    countries to do advocacy
  • CS is critical in creating demand and outrage
  • How does ACSM organize around whats needed
  • WHAT TO OPERATIONALIZE THE RESOURCE MOB EFFORTS
    SYNERGIZING DONORS AND AFFECTED COUNTRY CS

16
Supporting a patient-led response Bertrand
Kampour
  • Actions

17
Building active networks Pervaiz Tufail
  • Actions

18
Developing patient-led resourcesPaul Thorn
  • Actions
  • 1

19
Development of Benchmarks Beatrijs Stikkers,
KNCV
  • What are our concerns? What areas do we need to
    address to optimize the role of paccs
  • How do we build and strengthen PACSS Networks?
  • For national level roles
  • How do we strengthen their impact?
  • For global acsm strengthening roles

20
Benchmark questions
  • Does global acsm group have effective access to
    paccs?
  • To national partnerships /informal paccs groups
  • Do these include In-country patient perspectives
  • Does global acsm group have effective (indirect)
    access to?
  • Politicians and policy makers at country and
    global level
  • Budgetary processes for TB control at country,
    bi-lateral, multi-lateral and foundation levels
  • In-country public health and private health
    professionals
  • Are paccs provided with suitable messaging?

21
Benchmark questions (cont)
  • Are paccs effectively integrated into global acsm
    through suitable communication structures?
  • Clarity and suitability of communication
    structures for involving PACCS
  • Telephone conferences
  • Newsletter
  • Mobilization time when demanded
  • Clarity on interaction of secretariat with/ and
    support for PACCS
  • Is there a suitable framework for paccs at
    country level, and is this consistent with needs
    for global ACSM?
  • What is the mandate of ACSM- global advocacy, and
    more specifically PACCS
  • What enabling roles of PACCS can be defined
  • More questions .

22
Benchmark questions (cont)
  • Need to be worked out into clear benchmarks

23
Concluding
  • Next steps to strengthen roles in global ACSM by
    patients, affected communities and civil
    societya. Role in resource mobilization
  • Conclusions Sue Perez revisited
  • b. Strengthen roles of patient, affected
    communities and civil society
  • Conclusions Paul revisited, how to integrate
    Bertrands perspective
  • c. Build global ACSM network (or community) for
    TB control
  • Conclusions Pervaiz revisited

24
Conclusions (cont.)
  • d. Finalize benchmarks a. d.
  • ideas how to take this further?
  • how to connect to ACSM country-level WG?
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