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Morris Edwards Nadia Liu

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1 Morris Edwards Nadia Liu
Sustaining the AIDS response in Guyana: Optimizing available resources for maximal impact. Morris Edwards Nadia Liu

2 Country profile Size: 216,000 Km2 Population 747,884 (2012)
Population density: 3.6/km2 World Bank classification: Upper middle income (GDP/per capita 4,008) HIV prevalence Adult: 3.5% (2003); 1.6% (2017) Youths 15-24: 0.9% F, 0.6% M (2014) FSW: 5.5% (2014) MSM: 4.9 (2014) T.G: 8.4% (2014) ART coverage: 58% (2017) HIV cascade: NSP : Reduce new HIV infections & death by 50%

3 Policy questions To determine
How close will Guyana get to the HIV NSP targets if the 2015 budget envelope is annually available a) allocated according to current investment patterns b) optimally allocated across different programs and geographical regions? What additional investment is required to achieve the NSP targets, if funds are optimally allocated? What would be the optimal allocation of the HIV budget if more or less resources were available? What epidemiological effects could be expected if there were no further investments from the Government of Guyana in the HIV response? What are the costs and impacts of (i) achieving and (ii) implementing treat-all by 2018, assuming that funding to prevention programs is allocated as it was in 2015? If management and other ‘indirect’ costs can be cut by 20%, and this would not adversely affect the implementation of direct programs, how should these funds be optimally reallocated, and what would the impact of this be?

4 Methodology Allocative efficiency programme effectiveness study (AEPE) of govt and donor spending in 2015 Numerous data sources Guyana Bio-behavioural survey 2014; UN Pop Division; Spectrum; GARPR; UNAIDS AIDS info database; Statistical Dept. MOPH Guyana; PEPFAR; GFATM Modelling using Optima-HIV software Formal mathematical optimization algorithm to calculate optimal allocation of HIV investments across 10 regions and 7 core programmes Estimates validated against those of Spectrum

5 Results: HIV investments
HIV expenditure in Guyana by source (2015) Year Investments 2011 17 M 2012 27 M 2015 9.9 M PEPFAR funding to Guyana ( )

6 Funding by programmatic area
Programme area GoG (US$) USG (US$) GFATM (US$) Total US$ (%) Gen. pop prevention - 211,996 211,996 (2.13) Other prevention 137,954 245,752 383,706 (3.86) FSW 12,457 191,397 19,222 223,076 (2.24) MSM 28,476 108,727 156,425 (1.57) HTC 195,795 456,460 78,850 731,105 (7.36) ART -466,848 954,478 291,956 1,713,282 (17.24) lab 736,297 238,616 974,913 (9.81) PMTCT 295,419 110,337 405,756 (4.08) Other care 142,681 508,414 118,858 769,953 (7.75) Management 127,524 2,757,326 2,884,850 (29.03) OVC 149,665 149,665 (1.51) M&E 32,190 216,779 248,969 (2.51) Human Resource 256,890 125,928 382,818 (3.85) Enabling environment 184,087 184,087 (1.85) Infrastructure 4,762 389,519 394,281 (3.96) Research 121,951 121,951 (1.23) Total 2,437,293 6,759,436 740,104 9,936,833 (100)

7 A comparison of the current allocation of funds with the optimal allocation for achieving the targets of the NSP at minimal cost

8 New HIV infections in Guyana (2012, 2016, 2020) assuming no investments by the Government of Guyana

9 Annual treatment needs, new HIV infections, HIV-related deaths and HIV-related DALYs under current conditions compared with the achievement of in Guyana

10 HIV infections (left) and HIV-related deaths (right) under current conditions compared with scenario in which management costs are reduced and the funds are optimally allocated.

11 Conclusion Current allocation of funds will not lead to achievement of the NSP goals. Instead of a 50% reduction in new HIV infections, there would be a 12% increase in new HIV infections Optimally allocating funds across programmes and regions of the country will result in a 37% reduction in new HIV infections By ensuring a more efficient management programme, Guyana would free up funds to place more PLHIV on treatment Reducing programme management costs by 20% would release an additional US$576,000 Optimally allocating these funds would avert an additional 51% of new infections and 42% of deaths.

12 Conclusion……… Optimally allocating resources can improve impact even with no additional funds with substantial reduction in new HIV infections and AIDS related deaths and can reduce costs. Reallocating funds differently across programmes and geographical areas would enable Guyana to achieve its NSP targets Guyana’s government should immediately seek to: Reallocate and optimize its available resources Explore avenues for new revenue generation to offset funding gaps from reduced donor support.


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