A Comparative Analysis of the Financing of HIV/AIDS Programmes in Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland and ZimbabweHSRC Press, 2003 - 60 pages This social science research report compares the mechanisms for financing HIV/AIDS programs in Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe. The comparative analysis of the financial dimension of HIV/AIDS programs and interventions across the six countries includes a critique of their statistical differences. |
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Page vi
... Capita ( US $ ) for 1990-2000 By Country 44 Figure 11 : Health Expenditure as a percentage of government expenditure by Country 45 Figure 12 : Government expenditure on HIV / AIDS per capita and per PLWHA ( 2001 ) Figure 13 ...
... Capita ( US $ ) for 1990-2000 By Country 44 Figure 11 : Health Expenditure as a percentage of government expenditure by Country 45 Figure 12 : Government expenditure on HIV / AIDS per capita and per PLWHA ( 2001 ) Figure 13 ...
Page vii
... capita in the six countries US $ 300 250 200- $ 191 150 $ 255 1..l .. 100 50 $ 28 $ 9 $ 56 $ 43 Africa Another data limitation was the paucity of information on household ( and business ) expenditure on HIV / AIDS . Estimates from Latin ...
... capita in the six countries US $ 300 250 200- $ 191 150 $ 255 1..l .. 100 50 $ 28 $ 9 $ 56 $ 43 Africa Another data limitation was the paucity of information on household ( and business ) expenditure on HIV / AIDS . Estimates from Latin ...
Page viii
... capita in South Africa to a low of US $ 9 per capita in Mozambique . During the 1990s total health expenditure increased in all these countries except for South Africa . The largest increase was in Botswana where total health ...
... capita in South Africa to a low of US $ 9 per capita in Mozambique . During the 1990s total health expenditure increased in all these countries except for South Africa . The largest increase was in Botswana where total health ...
Page ix
... capita and US $ 27 per PLWHA . In the literature , the reported HIV / AIDS spending per capita ( excluding out - of - pocket spending ) for sub - Saharan Africa is US $ 0.3 per capita and US $ 8 per PLWHA . Regardless of the measure ...
... capita and US $ 27 per PLWHA . In the literature , the reported HIV / AIDS spending per capita ( excluding out - of - pocket spending ) for sub - Saharan Africa is US $ 0.3 per capita and US $ 8 per PLWHA . Regardless of the measure ...
Page 3
... capita estimates should use only adults aged 15-49 years . However , the comparison studies , reported by UNAIDS and others , used total population and not only the sexually active population as the definition from the HIV / AIDS Survey ...
... capita estimates should use only adults aged 15-49 years . However , the comparison studies , reported by UNAIDS and others , used total population and not only the sexually active population as the definition from the HIV / AIDS Survey ...
Common terms and phrases
Abuja Africa Swaziland Zimbabwe AIDS Support Bilateral Botswana Lesotho Mozambique budget capita GDP capita HIV/AIDS expenditure cent of GDP condoms core HIV/AIDS expenditure Department of Health DFID dis-aggregated donor Education expenditure in Botswana expenditure on HIV/AIDS external sources Figure 21 Financed HIV/AIDS Expenditure Functional Classification funding for HIV/AIDS Global Fund award Government of Botswana Government of Lesotho Government of Mozambique Government of Swaziland Health and Social health expenditure percentage health sector HIV/AIDS interventions HIV/AIDS programmes HIV/AIDS spending HIV/AIDS-related Human Development Index infected international dollars Lesotho Mozambique South level of expenditure Maternal mortality ratio Ministry of Finance Ministry of Health Mozambique South Africa Multilateral National Integrated Programme percentage of GDP PMTCT population provincial Public health expenditure six countries Social Welfare sources of funding South Africa Swaziland sub-Saharan Africa Total and Public Total health expenditure Total HIV/AIDS expenditure Tuberculosis and Malaria Turner Foundation World Bank
Popular passages
Page xii - UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund USAID United States Agency for International Development...
Page 1 - ... expectancy and imposes a devastating economic burden, and that the dramatic situation on the continent needs urgent and exceptional national, regional and international action; 9. Welcoming the commitments of African heads of State or Government at the Abuja special summit in April 2001, particularly their pledge to set a target of allocating at least 15 per cent of their annual national budgets for the improvement of the health sector to help to address the HIV/AIDS epidemic; and recognizing...
Page vi - Figure 19 Figure 20 Figure 21 Figure 22 Figure 23 Figure 24 Figure 25 Figure 26 Figure...
Page 38 - This committee consists of three ministries: the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Economic Planning and Development, and the Ministry of Labour and Public Service.
Page vii - Adopted by the world's governments at the Special Session of the United Nations General Assembly on HIV/AIDS in June 2001, it established, for the first time ever, timebound targets to which governments and the United Nations may be held accountable".
Page 58 - A Comparative Analysis of the Financing of HIV/AIDS Programmes in Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe" (Pretoria, South Africa: Human Sciences Research Council).
Page 27 - The projected impact on the health sector, due to increased demand for healthcare...
Page 51 - In the midst of all the calls for increased expenditure on health and HIV/AIDS, it is important to reflect on sustainability, and how one thinks about this critical development challenge.
Page 27 - Government expenditure as a percentage of GDP Health expenditure as a percentage of...