Mann Carlyn, Reuben Elan, Baker Susanna, Hijazi Mai, Nandakumar A K, Shetty Padma, Stanley Rob, Igboelina Onyeka, Nyombi Godfrey, Nzoya Dhimn, Oli Samson, Kena Garoma, Piña Carolina, Tuchman Jordan, Sklaw Kenneth, Kola-Jebutu Abimbola, Lohar Ivana, Cam Anh Nguyen Thi, Kamdem Simplice Takoubo, Kouadio Kouadio Yves Maxime
Office of HIV/AIDS, Global Health Bureau, U.S. Agency for International Development, Washington D.C, USA.
Office of U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, Washington D.C, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2025 May 28;24(Suppl 1):1670. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-11324-1.
UNAIDS estimated that US$29 billion will be required by 2025 to meet HIV/AIDS service demands, with 53 percent expected to come from domestic sources. The PEPFAR-funded, USAID-implemented Sustainable Financing Initiative for HIV/AIDS (SFI), starting in 2014, supported domestic resources mobilization efforts and activities to strengthen countries' public financial management (PFM) systems, positively contributing to much-needed increase in domestic resources for health and HIV.
SFI was implemented in 12 countries, supporting activities to build the capacity of governments to mobilize domestic resources for HIV, improve budget absorption, and maximize resource use and develop and use evidence for advocacy to increase domestic government funds for HIV/AIDS. SFI measured impact by agreed upon indicators and estimated return on investment (ROI).
Eight countries focused on building capacity to improve budgeting and execution of health and HIV/AIDS funds; five experienced increases in budget allocation and spending. Kenya country governments spent an additional US$180 million and US$8.7 million on health and HIV, respectively. This contributed to US$60 mobilized and spent for every SFI dollar invested. Eight countries focused on using evidence to advocate for more domestic resources for health and HIV/AIDS from government budgets, increase budget execution, and identify areas for efficiency. Cambodia saw an increase in government commitments for ARVs from US$1.5 million annually from 2018-2020 to US$5 million by 2023.
Robust data are needed for evidence-based advocacy to increase domestic government funding for HIV/AIDS and to strengthen PFM systems for more efficient and effective resource use; institutionalizing capacity building efforts allows for locally-led technical assistance; policy-related work is a multi-year endeavor; PFM success can be stymied by political transitions, political will, and donor commitments; COVID-19 brought new challenges and new opportunities; measurable results can lead to greater impact; and results are not necessarily solely project attributions with possible inflation of ROI estimates given there was no counterfactual.
Strengthening PFM systems can increase domestic resources for health and HIV through increased revenue and improved efficiency; closing the investment gap to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic by 2030.
联合国艾滋病规划署估计,到2025年将需要290亿美元来满足艾滋病毒/艾滋病服务需求,预计其中53%将来自国内资源。由总统艾滋病紧急救援计划(PEPFAR)资助、美国国际开发署(USAID)实施的艾滋病毒/艾滋病可持续融资倡议(SFI)于2014年启动,支持国内资源调动工作以及加强各国公共财务管理(PFM)系统的活动,为急需增加的卫生和艾滋病毒国内资源做出了积极贡献。
SFI在12个国家实施,支持开展活动以建设政府为艾滋病毒调动国内资源的能力,提高预算吸收能力,最大限度地利用资源,并开发和利用宣传证据以增加政府用于艾滋病毒/艾滋病的资金。SFI通过商定的指标衡量影响并估计投资回报率(ROI)。
八个国家专注于建设能力以改善卫生和艾滋病毒/艾滋病资金的预算编制和执行;五个国家的预算分配和支出有所增加。肯尼亚国家政府分别在卫生和艾滋病毒方面额外支出了1.8亿美元和870万美元。这意味着每投资1美元的SFI能调动和支出60美元。八个国家专注于利用证据倡导从政府预算中为卫生和艾滋病毒/艾滋病争取更多国内资源,提高预算执行率,并确定提高效率的领域。柬埔寨政府对抗逆转录病毒药物的承诺从2018 - 2020年每年150万美元增加到2023年的500万美元。
需要可靠的数据进行循证宣传,以增加政府用于艾滋病毒/艾滋病的资金,并加强公共财务管理系统以更高效地利用资源;将能力建设努力制度化可实现由当地主导的技术援助;与政策相关的工作是一项多年努力;公共财务管理的成功可能会受到政治过渡、政治意愿和捐助承诺的阻碍;2019冠状病毒病带来了新挑战和新机遇;可衡量的结果可带来更大影响;鉴于没有反事实情况,结果不一定完全是项目的功劳,投资回报率估计可能存在夸大。
加强公共财务管理系统可通过增加收入和提高效率来增加卫生和艾滋病毒的国内资源;缩小投资差距以在2030年前终结艾滋病毒/艾滋病流行。