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Donor Coordination: Developing Partnerships in the 21st Century LAC/SOTA March 16, 2001
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$285.3 $197.7
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Economic Factors Universality of Capitalism Globalization Tax Payer/Consumer Driven Investment Driven
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Political Factors End of Cold War Decline of Statism
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Partnership Persons or organizations working together to achieve a common goal.
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Types of Partners Bilaterals: (DFID, GTZ, JICA) Multilaterals: (WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA) Host Governments: (Ministries of Health and Finance) Academic Institutions Foundations: (Gates, Packard) U.S. Government Agencies (CDC, NIH, State) Private Sector -Profit: (Proctor & Gamble, Bectin Dickenson) -Non-Profit: (CARE, FHI, Population Council)
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Characteristics of Successful Partnerships High Level of Commitment Good Communication/Coordination Adequate Funding/Resources Clearly Defined Goals/Shared Vision Clearly Defined Roles of Partners Complimentary Nature of Partnership
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Impediments to Partnerships Staff turnover Partners have incompatible management structures and procedures Too many partners
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How could partnership be improved? Develop a concrete, long-term strategy Improve coordination, communication Members devote more time Reflect changing needs and priorities
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USAID’s Vitamin A Effort (VITA) * Agency-wide initiative launched in late 1997 * Private sector component launched by Mrs. Clinton in March 1999 Goals * 80% of children at-risk will have sufficient vit A * 30% reduction in child deaths in targeted countries Methods (supplementation, food fortification, diet) * Mainstream vitamin A interventions * Scale up effective programs * Develop innovative programs and approaches * Enhance global participation (public/private sector)
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What we know about Vitamin A Prevents nutritional blindness 23% reduction in child deaths *** - reduction in severity of diarrheal cases - reduction in severity of measles cases 30% fewer malaria-related febrile episodes 45% reduction in maternal mortality in 1 field trial
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VITA - What’s Happening? Global Vitamin A Effort (not just USAID) 78 countries have vitamin A programs 60 countries link vitamin A with NIDS in 1999 1/2 the children in need worldwide have received at least 1 capsule USAID Vitamin A Activities 12 million at-risk children reached in FY 1999 22 missions support supplement programs (throughCAs,PVOs, others) 12 VITA focus countries 6 missions involved with food fortification activities 4 missions support home/community garden programs 6 missions involved in vitamin A research (global funds)
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Global Vitamin A Alliance: Partners Donors US Canada United Kingdom Japan Netherlands * International Agencies UNICEF WHO PAHO World Bank Foundations/Institutions Wellcome; Sight and Life; JHU INCAP Developing Countries Pharmaceutical Companies BASF; Roche Vitamins Civic Organizations & PVOs Kiwanis; Lions; Rotary; Sister Cities Mulinational Food Co. Cal Western; Cargill; Kellogg; Land O’ Lakes; Mars; Monsanto; Procter and Gamble; Tate & Lyle Sugar; Unilever; Food Industry Associations US and Canadian Contractors
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Examples of Joint Activities Sending consistent information on to donor field offices (benefits of adding vitamin A to NIDS) USAID Mission CIDA Field Staff UNICEF Field Office Signing a Global Declaration to Reduce Vitamin A Deficiency Mrs. Clinton and First Lady of the Philippines Director of CIDA Executive Director of UNICEF, WHO Civic Organizations Private Sector CEOs Country level activities Supplementation programs with USAID/CIDA/UNICEF (including CAs/PVOs) Fortification/enhancement efforts with private industry,governments, CAs/PVOs
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Activities to Maintain Coordination Periodic Conference Calls with Donors -- Hoping to expand to other donors Newsletter distributed bi annually (VITAGRAM) Discus issues at UNICEF Executive meetings, WHO bilateral meetings, bilateral meetings Individual discussions with multinational food producers, ie, Procter & Gamble, Monsanto VITA meetings in Washington JPPC Involvement
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