Institutional factors and HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria.

2008 
This paper outlines the principal institutional factors affecting the slow progress in reaching agreed targets in Africa regarding the prevention and control of HIV/AIDS TB and Malaria. It focuses on three key factors: political analysis strategic business approach and international inputs. Most of the analyses tend to look at the technical aspects of disease prevention and control of political analysis there is a marked absence. Yet we know that wider contextual or macro factors such as power and political decision making can make or break a programme. Many senior managers in public sector institutions are preoccupied with day-to-day work. Successful businesses in the private sector have some things in common with each other. Outstanding leadership a strategic and action orientated culture highly focused on comparative strengths on priorities and quality being some of the key ones. Adopting such successful business characteristics might make the difference to public institutions. The move to results based institutions by focussing on outputs and outcomes is for the better. However we still need to rigorously examine the quality of inputs that the increasing availability of funds is being used on. This is especially so in relation to needing a better balance between aid for health services and that for institutional and health systems development. In addition technical advisers from development partners need to work more across a ministry of health on institutional and management change to have a greater impact on achieving targets. (authors)
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