CHAI- Sustainable HIV/AIDS and Health Financing II
Contribution ID : SE-0-SE-6-51040065This website displays open data about Swedish aid, which shows when, to whom and for what purpose Swedish aid is paid out, as well as what results it has produced. This page contains information about one of the contributions financed with Swedish aid.
The contribution aims to contribute to sustainable health financing in 8 countries; South Africa, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia, Cameroon, Rwanda and Ethiopia. With a vision to create “a regional network of countries who have gained the independence and ability to more efficiently, transparently and accountably manage and direct health resources” the pro...
Read the full descriptionFrom
- C01 - Project-type interventions
Within
Breakdown of the total amount paid for the entire contribution.
Financial information
Total committed amount: USD 00
Total paid amount: USD 00
Sustainable Development Goals
Information about the Sustainable Development Goals is unavailable for this activity.
More about the contribution
The contribution aims to contribute to sustainable health financing in 8 countries; South Africa, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia, Cameroon, Rwanda and Ethiopia. With a vision to create “a regional network of countries who have gained the independence and ability to more efficiently, transparently and accountably manage and direct health resources” the project aims to (i) support implementation and institutionalization of health financing strategies and other high impact reforms by iteratively moving plans to action; (ii) strengthen management accounting systems to enable country governments to gain greater control over key aspects of health sector financing, and (iii) empower Governments with tools, skills and processes that will provide capacity to manage an increasing share of domestic resources allocated to healthcare. The project is merited as many countries are in the process to reform their systems for financing health services, which provides an opportunity to support a process towards equity in access and fairness in financing. Second, many countries, both those who support external financing and those providing external support are challenged by the increasing demands for accountability and performance reporting. The support provided by CHAI in developing coherent management accounting systems integrating performance or management information with financial information, aims at strengthening government systems to enable them to deliver on reporting on both accountability and operational results.
All activities related to the contribution are shown here. Click on an individual activity to see in-depth information.
Total aid 0 USD distributed on 0 activities
A list of all paid transactions for a specific contribution is presented here. Each payment can be traced to a specific activity. Negative amounts indicate that there has been a refund.
0 transactions
No transactions available for this contribution
0 contribution documents
Link to download |
---|
No contribution documents available for this contribution
Result
As a partner organization, the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) is characterized by a structured but at the same time flexible; working approach with a high institutional capacity. The achievements of the program, reflect a strategic and gradual development process focusing on strengthened health systems for greater access to SRHR. Beginning in 2012, CHAI worked with governments in Sub-Saharan Africa to accelerate progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC), aiming to increase financial protection and coverage of basic health services for women, girls and populations at greatest need. CHAI worked closely with governments to move towards aid independence, and to improve efficiency, transparency and accountability in health financing. During Phase I (January 2012 - April 2014), CHAI focused on six countries (Ethiopia, Swaziland, Malawi, Rwanda, South Africa and Zambia), identifying key challenges for sustainable health financing, and began development of health financing strategies to address these challenges. During this programme period (phase II from April 2014-December 2017 with a no cost extension through June 2018), CHAI continued working with the six original focus countries, and expanded support to share approaches and lessons learned with two new countries: Zimbabwe and Cameroon. CHAI provided technical assistance through a deep engagement in each focus country, with teams on the ground working on a day to day basis with Ministries of Health to build national capacity and ensure the sustainability of this work. A regional team supports this work and enables knowledge sharing between countries, as well as to other countries and regional and global stakeholders. Consequently, achievements of this programme period are based on persistent work over a long period of time, where opportunities are gained through a high degree of flexibility and adaptation to emerging situations.
- The overall outcome is the number of participating countries implementing equitable health financing strategies through an inclusive process as indicated by analysis on implications on human rights, gender, and access to care.- Overarching Vision for 2017: A regional network of countries who have gained the independence and ability to more efficiently, transparently and accountably manage and direct health resources.
Swedish aid in numbers and reports
Do you want to read more about the results of Swedish aid?
Reports from the Expert Group for Aid Studies and Sida's strategy and corruption reports Sida's annual report (Swedish only)