Title: Health and Development Impact and Multisectoral Strategies
1 Health and DevelopmentImpact and Multisectoral
Strategies
- Ishrat Z. Husain
- HIV/AIDS and Development Workshop
- April, 28,2003
2Overview
- Health and Development Relationship
- Impact of HIV/AIDS on Health
- Implications of deteriorating health status on
development prospects. - What each sector could do to improve health and
achieve its own strategic objectives. - Lessons Learnt from USAID efforts in implementing
multisectoral programs.
3Health and Development
- Health is a necessary though not a sufficient
condition of development or of attaining Agencys
Strategic Objectives - Productivity of workers depends on good health-
growing evidence of decline in productivity due
to HIV/AIDS and malaria - Loss of labor force and absenteeism due to
HIV/AIDS and other diseases - Increase in poverty and inequities due to
morbidity and mortalilty.
4Development and Health
- Development is an essential although not a
sufficient condition for improving health. - Imperative of having adequate water supply,
sanitation, basic education, information and
nutrition for maintaining health. - Development process creates conditions of ill
health such as population mobility and inequities
in income making populations vulnerable.
5HIV/AIDS Impact on Health Systems
- Already weak system is now devastated
- Crowding out- 48-70 of hospital beds are
occupied by PLWAs in Zambia and Malawi
respectively - Reallocation of budgets- A large part of the
budget has to be allocated for drugs - Antiretroviral treatment costs over 500 per
patient. - Loss of Manpower- Attrition of over 20 of the
nurses
6Impact of HIV/AIDS on Health Status
- Child mortality is increasing. USAID invested
heavily in child survival programs - Average life expectancy in sub-Saharan Africa is
now 47 years, when it would have been 62 years
without AIDS (UNAIDS, 2002). - Level of living is the indicator of level of
development.
7Declining life expectancyChanges in life
expectancy in selected African countries with
high and low HIV prevalence 1950-2005
Source UNAIDS, 2002. Report on the global
HIV/AIDS epidemic
8Implications for Economic Development
- 10-30 loss of workforce for all sectors in high
prevalence countries - Loss of rare skills and productivity in key
strategic areas agriculture, education, DG, and
health - The age and sex structures are changing, implying
a profound shift in economic and social
relationship
9(No Transcript)
10Current and projected age profiles of workers in
a typical South African mine
The Impact of HIV and AIDS on Africa's Economic
Development BMJ 2002324232-234
( 26 January )
11Impact of HIV/AIDS on Women and Girls
12What Each Sector Can Do?
- Mitigate the impact of poor health and HIV/AIDS
on the sector itself. - Guard against future losses or help prevent the
diseases by - Conveying the prevention messages through its own
channels such as teachers union. - Addressing the basic determinants of the diseases
such as low education, inequities
13What Each Sectors Can Do?-
- Illustrative Actions- National level
- Assess the impact of major diseases on the sector
or strategic objectives - Develop strategic plans that take into account
the future impact. - Review and modify policies that have adverse
impact on health.
14What Sectors Can Do?
- At the community level
- Develop and implement programs to address the
basic determinants of health either individually
or jointly with other sectors focusing on
vulnerable groups - Youth/orphans
- Women
15Successes - Zambia
- Zambia is a best practice country for the
adoption of a multisectoral program - USAID/Zambia has developed an HIV/AIDS
Multisectoral Strategic Framework - Embassy wide HIV/AIDS Coordination Group
- HIV/AIDS and Orphan Working Group- participation
from each Strategic Objective
16Successes South Africa
- Parliamentarian training for private sector
mobilization - The Mission also encourages microenterprise
programs, some of which are being linked to
private sector programs - USAID Mission has adopted economic growth
strategies that will help reduce inequities in
income by generating employment for vulnerable
groups.
17Successes - Uganda
- In 1993, Uganda adopted a multisectoral approach
- 12 ministries are involved in responding to
HIV/AIDS problems from their vantage point - The involvement of different ministries created
national ownership and commitment - Each sector adopted policies and programs to
support HIV/AIDS programming
18Zimbabwe Project LEAD
- Implementing a household garden and nutrition kit
aimed at improving the nutritional status of
household income of families affected by AIDS. - The kit allows families to create and maintain
close-in gardens growing crops to increase number
of harvests per year - Voucher system to link AIDS-affected families
to legal services
19What the Health Sector Should Do?
- Health Sector focused on care and cure and not on
prevention. If it acted like a private company
the focus will be on prevention of major
epidemics. - Health sector itself responsible to spread the
epidemic through infected needles and blood.
20What the Health Sector Could Do?
- Greater focus on systematic health system
strengthening. - Serious efforts to harnessing the energies of
other sectors to improve health - Multisectoral efforts are confined to HIV/AIDS
thus far and can be extended to Health.
21Lessons Learnt from Multisectoral Efforts
- Success is defined by 3 Cs.
- Commitment- AFR organized two consultative
meeting and SOTA courses on Multisectoral
approaches. It generated Champions. Country level
success also associated with the commitment of
the Diretor - Coordination- A multisectoral working groups
chaired by the Director to bring coordination and
synergy.
22Lessons Learnt
- Concerted Actions- Geographic focus for
mutisectoral efforts is important as truncated
actions do not produce results. - Best practice examples Zambia, South Africa and
Zimbabwe.
23Lessons Learned (3)
- Funding constraints- possible solutions
- Use of DA funds as HIV/AIDS prevention will save
cost - Health and HIV/AIDS Activities three kinds
- Little or no additional funding e.g. policy
dialogue - Modest Funds e.g.analytical work relocation of
activities - Large Funds leveraging other donor funds
- Establishment of Multisectoral Fund
24Conclusion
- Commitment, Coordination and Concerted Actions
are needed to - Strengthen the health systems
- Create conditions for improved health outcome by
addressing the basic determinants of health
through multisectoral efforts