Title: Action For Global Health
1Action For Global Health
- Health as a Tracer Sector
- Brussels 2 April 2008
- Elisabeth SANDOR
- OECD DCD
2Content
- 1. Background on Health as a tracer sector
- 2. The challenges and progress
- in Aid Effectiveness in Health
- 3. Health as a Tracer Sector in Accra
3Better results are needed !
- Tracking Health MDGs in SSA
- HIV prevalence among pregnant women aged 15-24
only 8 out of 36 countries on target - TB prevalence only 4 countries on target, 27 with
worsening trend - Under-5 Mortality Rate 2 countries on target, 25
making progress but behind time-bound target, 9
with worsening trend - Source Global Fund, 2007
4Background
- High-Level Fora on Aid Effectiveness and Scaling
up for Better Health (2004-2006) focused on AE
lack of aid predictability, alignment and CH,
insufficient ownership and use of country systems
produced best practice for GHPs interventions
in countries - Dec.2006 WHO/WB/OECD meeting on Aid
Effectiveness and health participants endorsed
Health as a tracer sector - Health as a tracer sector to feed the broader
agenda on AE (best practice, lessons, keeping
public support to financing for development)
5Background (2)
- OECD work on AE in health DCR 2007, DCD EFF
coordinates with IHP and other health-related
initiatives (Health Metrics Network,
International Health Metrics and Evaluation,
Global Innovative financing), preparation of HLF3
in Accra - One Task Team on HaTS to pilot and guide the
work up to Accra and beyond (links with
International Health Partnership and UNSG
Steering Committee on MDGs in Africa) - So objective not only for Accrabut keep Health
as a source of lessons for better AE/results and
development impact
6Content
- 1. Background on Health as a tracer sector
- 2. The challenges and progress
- in Aid Effectiveness in Health
- 3. Health as a Tracer Sector in Accra
7The challenges in AE in Health more aid is
needed
- Health captured a large part of the ODA increase
but more aid is still needed to reach common
agreed objectives (also DAH increase brings
greater need for accountability) - The current uncertainties about future increase
of aid - The bulk of the increase in DAH has been going to
specific initiatives and few bilateral programs
8The path to delivering the 2010 promises is
getting steeper and what will there be for
health ?
9DAH has significantly increased and changed
- Most of the
- recent increase
- focused on Africa
- focused on specific diseases
- was channeled through bilateral (US) and new
multilateral agencies (GAVI A, GFTAM)
Source Michaud 2006
10Bilateral ODAH (in constant USD millions)
11Bilateral ODAH (in constant USD Millions)
12The challenges in AE in HealthBetter aid is
neededImplementing the 2005 Paris Declaration
13The challenges in AE in health better aid is
needed
- Improve AE is key in a sector which is
- - complex (large number of actors,
multi-sectoral nature of the determinants of
health, multiple financing streams, health
results require long-term and sustained
investments) - - heavily fragmented at global and country
levels
14Fragmentation in international effort .
Source Don De Savigny COHRED
15Health aid can be very volatile and
unpredictable Disbursements from DAC members
2001- 2005
Source OCDE, 2007
16The challenges in AE in Health Donor aid can be
poorly aligned within country systems and
priorities
- Example from Rwanda (Scaling up for Better
Health, 2005) - Donor preference to disburse via NGOs/manage
funds themselves/send them directly to
local-level projects . Central Government manages
only 14 of donor support to the health sector. - Inequalities in the distribution of donor funding
by strategic objective 18mn earmarked for
malaria (the biggest cause of mortality and
morbidity), 1mn for the integrated management of
childhood illnesses and 47mn for HIV/AIDS.
17Donor collaboration is a challenge
INT NGO
WHO
CIDA
3/5
UNAIDS
GTZ
RNE
UNICEF
Norad
WB
Sida
MOF
USAID
T-MAP
UNTG
PMO
CF
DAC
GFCCP
PRSP
PEPFAR
HSSP
GFATM
MOEC
MOH
SWAP
CCM
NCTP
CTU
CCAIDS
NACP
PRIVATE SECTOR
CIVIL SOCIETY
LOCAL GVT
Source Mbewe, WHO
18The progress and remaining challengesin AE in
health
- The current renewed interest for Health Systems
has generated a set of interventions which need
to be coordinated/harmonised - Changes in aid modality can have unintended
consequences for health - Its important to track and report on progress
about the different ongoing initiatives
19The progress and remaining challenges in AE in
Health
- Division of labour and coordination at the global
level informal group of the H8 and IHP - Global Programs continuous effort to implement
the Paris agenda - Harmonise ME
- Change behaviour remains key
20Content
- 1. Background on Health as a tracer sector
- 2. The challenges and progress
- in Aid Effectiveness in Health
- 3. Health as a Tracer Sector in Accra
21What is Accra ?
- High Level political event on aid, a few months
before Financing for Development in Doha - Mid-term Stock-taking of the Paris Declaration
mutual commitments - Forward looking event road to 2011.
- 100 partner countries, most donors, most
international aid agencies, - 800 to 1000 participants
- Strong civil society engagement ( parallel
event)
22List of Roundtables
- RT 1 Country ownership
- RT 2 Alignment country syst, predictability
- RT 3 Harmonisation- complementarity
- RT 4 Results impacts
- RT 5 Mutual accountability
- RT 6 Civil society aid effectiveness
- RT 7 Situations of fragility conflicts
- RT 8 Sector applications (health, education,
infrastructure) - RT 9 Aid architecture (incl. GHPs)
23Core Issues (Partner Countries) for the RTs and
the Accra Agenda for Action
- Untying
- Conditionality
- Predictability
- Division of Labour
- Incentives
- Capacity Development
- cross cutting issues human rights,
environment, gender
24Health as a Tracer Sector in Accra
- A contribution to the Roundtable on sector
application of the PD (will look at lessons
SWAp and PBA - across 4 sectors) - One Report on Health and Aid Effectiveness to
take stock - Other inputs to other RTs and to the Market
place - Concrete recommendations for the AAA
- all prepared by the Task Team on HaTS
25Examples of inputs on HaTS in Accra
- Compacts for mutual accountability in a set of
partner countries (five ones) - Study on donors constraints to provide long term
health aid - Best practice and lessons from GHPs
- Study on Human rights and AE in health
- Monitoring progress in AE in health
26 Thank you www.accrahlf.net