The time period estimated for achieving these results is five years, and the general geographic scope of the framework covers the countries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.
Based on the availability of funding, it is expected that the new activities proposed will meet the following health programme elements of the Investing in People objective in the US Foreign Assistance Framework:
Planned Programme Highlights
Plans underway for future USAID/CAR health activities are briefly summarized below. Descriptions of all future activities are meant to be illustrative and will depend on a number of factors, such as the availability of funds and specific funding directives. As more resources become available, additional activities and new projects may be added to better support the USAID/CAR health results framework and the US foreign assistance framework.
USAID/CAR awarded a five-year cooperative agreement to Mercy Corps in October 2008 in direct support of the Ministry of Health of Tajikistan’s existing initiatives to introduce “integrated management of childhood illnesses” (IMCI) programmeming, and to further build capacity in maternal and newborn care, as well as monitoring of early childhood development and growth. All interventions are being carried out in concert with provincial and district health authorities — the primary partners and recipients of capacity-building support. The estimated life-of-project funding for this agreement is approximately US$3,000,000.
Beginning in January 2009, USAID/CAR plans to launch an MDR TB Case Management & Social Support project that will build on the successes of a USAID-funded, Almaty-based pilot project known as the Gorgas TB Initiative, which ended in September 2008. The project will be implemented through an existing grant to the Dutch TB foundation known as KNCV. The initial phase of the project is expected to last two years, funded at approximately US$8 million. The geographic scope of the project is all five Central Asian republics, although Kazakhstan will be the initial focus of the grant. In Kazakhstan, the project will work with the Ministry of Health, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria and others to expand MDR TB case management and social support services beyond the Gorgas pilot to other parts of Kazakhstan. The project will work with all five Central Asian republics on the adaptation of best practices from case management models to complement country-specific work on MDR TB.
A five-year Health Improvement Project will provide technical assistance, training, equipment and commodities to assist the Central Asian Republics to improve the quality, scope, and coordination of health services. By incorporating quality improvement techniques and international standards into ongoing health system reforms, this programme will assist Central Asian countries to improve the management, financing, and implementation of medical services provided for tuberculosis (TB), HIV/AIDS, and maternal and child health care. USAID expects to carry out this project through a contract or task order. The total anticipated life-of-project funding for this programme is US$90 million, and the geographic scope is all five Central Asian republics (with varying degrees and types of emphasis). The mission plans to share for public comment a draft scope of work in the December 2008 - January 2009 timeframe.
Planning for a new five-year regional HIV Outreach Programme is also underway. This programme would model and promote best practices for selected high-quality prevention and care services for most-at-risk populations.
Themes under consideration include substitution therapy, treatment readiness (for injecting drug users), drug demand reduction, HIV counseling and testing, social support, safer sexual practices, police assistance, prerelease and post-release services for prisoners, stigma and discrimination, and accessible and friendly health care. The total anticipated life-of-project funding for this programme is approximately US$20 million, and the geographic scope is all five Central Asian republics (with varying degrees and types of emphasis). Working in coordination with the Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator, USAID/CAR plans to share for public comment a draft programme description sometime in early 2009.
In mid-2009, USAID/CAR hopes to initiate a five-year safe water activity in Tajikistan. Plans for the implementing mechanism and primary objectives are still under development. The anticipated funding level for this project is estimated at roughly US$4 million.
From time to time throughout the period of implementation of the new USAID/CAR health portfolio, USAID expects to fund targeted data collection and dissemination activities, as needed and as resources allow. These activities may include health surveys (e.g. UNICEF’s Multi-Indicator Cluster Survey), needs assessments, targeted evaluations, data quality assessments, and special studies.