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ROADS: Regional Outreach Addressing AIDS through Development Strategies Gail Goodridge, ROADS Director Family Health International 16.

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Presentation on theme: "ROADS: Regional Outreach Addressing AIDS through Development Strategies Gail Goodridge, ROADS Director Family Health International 16."— Presentation transcript:

1 ROADS: Regional Outreach Addressing AIDS through Development Strategies Gail Goodridge, ROADS Director Family Health International ggoodridge@fhi.org 16 December 2008

2 The Importance of Transport Corridor Projects Transport Corridor The areas of highest prevalence in Africa are along major transport corridors Sudan DRC Tanzania Kenya Ethiopia Median ANC Prevalence, 2000-2002 Tanzania Rwanda Burundi Djibouti The corridors are economic lifelines and HIV infection networks cutting through: Kenya Uganda Rwanda Burundi DRC Ethiopia Sudan Djibouti Tanzania

3 Key Factors for HIV Risk Men  Prevalence of truck drivers >2X general population  60% spend <40 nights at home  Average 2.3 partners  Over 80% married  62% report casual partners Women & Sex Work  40% of girls 15-19 had sex with truckers  8600 FSW on corridor  10% reached by HIV interventions  80% of women in some communities engage in sex work  Mean of 13 clients/month; 54 liaisons  >50% partners are truckers and police Hot Spots  6000 trucks parked per night  28% near VCT  4800-9000 new infections/year Source: Annual figures from Kenya and Uganda, Univ of Nairobi/Univ of Manitoba Strengthening STD/HIV Control Project 2005

4 ROADS Program OBJECTIVES:  Links mobile populations and communities along transport corridors to health and HIV services services  Identifies emerging technical issues, shares state-of-the-art practices  Tests new innovations through community-based, national and regional partnerships Program VISION: To leave communities stronger

5 ROADS I Sites

6 What does SafeTStop mean?  People are safe & have skills to talk about and take action to address HIV/AIDS and health issues  Safeguard health through greater use of HIV/AIDS & health services  Reduction in unsafe use of substances such as alcohol  Women and children are safe from violence & sexual exploitation  Improved access to safety nets for most vulnerable families & children  Increased ability to secure safe income

7 Truck stop/community structures People living with AIDS Low- income women Youth Faith- based leaders Business leaders Drug Shop owners Health and social Services Local government (police, area chief, town council, district dev office…) Men, transport workers Orphans & Children

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9 Services for transport workers Transport workers HIV testing Wellness centers Alcohol- free recreation Adult education Internet connectivity Psycho- social/ spiritual support Referrals to community services

10 ROADS accomplishments: first three years  27 branded SafeTStop towns in 8 countries [total population of 2.2 million]  600 community groups with of 33,000 members leading & implementing programs  1.2 million people reached with services

11 Public/private partnerships Michael Kibinge Global Development Alliance Specialist USAID/East Africa

12 Working with local private sector

13 Kenya Ministry of Transport billboard launch February 2006

14 GDAs are Strategic & Win-Win - 82% of all resource flows from the US to developing world come from the private sector - Increase development impact implies a furthering of SO’s - Alliances offer impact, scale and sustainability Business Interests Donor Development Goals Development Impact

15 GDA: A Type of PPP GDA Public-Private Partnerships A GDA is a strategic type of public-private partnership for the purpose of achieving significant development impact

16 GDA Criteria  Jointly defined problem and solution  Shared resources, risks, responsibilities & rewards  Innovative approaches to working with new partners  1:1 leverage of cash, expertise, systems, networks and other resources

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18 Opportunities for partnership  Information sharing  Health services through wellness centers  Space for wellness/resource centers at ports  Community outreach to protect workers families  Others?

19 Thank you! ggoodridge@fhi.org mkibinge@usaid.gov


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