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Working Group on ITNs September 8&9, 2003 Thomas Teuscher RBM Partnership Secretariat
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An update on RBM Partnership 1. The RBM Partnership Board 2. The RBM Partnership Secretariat 3. Global Consensus mechanisms 4. Focusing efforts at country level
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RBM Partnership The state of development in 2002 External evaluation identified the following two major weaknesses of the RBM partnership –Partners’ roles and responsibilities unclear –Global consensus on better practices to scale-up proven interventions –Progress of implementation at country levels
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Reorienting the RBM partnership Partnership to improve on transparent management mechanisms 1. Creation of a Partnership Board 2. Creation of a unified Partnership Secretariat Hosting of global Secretariat provided by WHO HQ
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1. RBM Partnership Board The Board provides the mechanism for joint decision-making by, and partner accountability to the partnership. The Board approves and guides mid-term policies, strategies and actions for its Secretariat and other partner groupings or individual partner organisations in support of increased malaria control action at country level; and The Board monitors and evaluates the performance of the partnership and its secretariat.
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1.RBM Partnership Board Constituencies 19 members representing all RBM constituencies 3 founding partners (UNICEF, WB, WHO) 6 malaria endemic countries (Ghana, India, Senegal, Zambia; +Central Africa, +Horn of Africa, Venezuela) 3 OECD donor countries (Italy, Netherlands, USA) 1 NGOs (interim member CORE & alternate IFRC) 1 Private Sector (member Bayer, alternate Pfizer) 1 Research and Academia (MIM Secretariat) 1 Foundations TBD GFATM Executive Director RBM Executive Secretary
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2. Unified RBM Partnership Secretariat Ensure better coordination and planning by partners at the global, regional, sub-regional and country levels. Use the comparative advantages of different partners for better implementation of partnership action plans, particularly those of endemic countries. Support Working Groups and keep the partnership informed of outcomes from these Groups.
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3. Strengthen global consensus RBM Partnership Working Groups Country partnerships find it difficult to reach consensus as to what constitutes good practice in scaling-up interventions. This may be the result of lack of global consensus. Board has adopted the TOR proposed by 6 Working Groups (case management, ITN, MIP, M&E, Finance and RM, Communications). A working group on Complex Emergencies is under development. Board will review progress of Working Groups at the April 2004 Board meetings.
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3. Strengthen global consensus RBM Partnership Working Groups Working Group TOR Purpose –Identify better practices to scale-up available recommended tools. –Promote through sub-regional networks better practices. Membership: – All constituencies represented Chair: –Working Group to elect Hosting: –By RBM partners Next steps: –Workplan with essential next steps 2003
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3. Strengthen global consensus RBM Partnership Working Groups The Secretariat expects the Working Group members to: synthesize knowledge and disseminate best practices provide operational framework with costing clear set of products regularly updated finalize and clear documents before they go on RBM website promote consensus frameworks with subregional networks co-ordinate with other global initiatives, Working Groups or other committees to ensure consensus on best practices to scale through Secretariat's support backstop sub regional networks for provision of programmatic assistance to country Partnership
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4. Focussing efforts at country level Categorization of Country Support. Country readiness and availability of resources for scaling-up will determine the strategy of support. The Partnership recognizes three categories: –High readiness; –Limited readiness with additional resources; and –Other countries (i.e. post-conflict, low disease burden, and countries out of Africa).
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Category I: Countries with high readiness to work towards achieving national targets West Africa –Benin, Ghana, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal East Africa and Horn of Africa –Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, UR Tanzania, Sudan Southern Africa –Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe
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Category II: Countries with Limited readiness but with additional resources including GFATM West Africa Burkina Faso Guinea Mauritania Eastern Africa Burundi Comoros Somalia Southern Africa Madagascar Mozambique Namibia South Africa Swaziland
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Category III: Other countries Angola Botswana Cameroon C.A.R. Chad Congo Cote D’Ivoire Djibouti D.R. Congo Equatorial Guinea Gabon Guinea Bissau Liberia Niger Rwanda Sao Tome and Principe Sierra Leone The Gambia Togo Asian Countries Latin American Countries
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RBM Partnership Board meeting “Decisions on WG” 1. The Board mandated the EXS RBM to make operational Working Groups, taking into account cautions raised by Board. 2. The Board requested the EXS RBM to develop criteria for the purpose of evaluating Working Group effectiveness and report to the next Board meeting. 3. The Board empowered the proposed Working Groups and delegated the management of these groups to the Secretariat.
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RBM Partnership Board meeting “Recommendations on WG” 1.RBM Partnership EXS to report to September 2003 Board meeting on progress of working groups. 2.RBM Partnership EXS to report to April(?) 2004 Board meeting on “value added” by Working Groups. 3.Working Groups be evaluated against the availability of usable consensus strategies at country level within 6 months.
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Issues to consider by ITN WG 1.Permanent Chair – Working Group to identify 2.Secretariat - Working Group to identify 3.Hosting partner – financial implications 4.Membership - inclusive i.e. all constituencies 5.Workplan 2003 6.RBM Partnership Secretariat support
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Issues to consider by ITN WG Issues to consider in the 2003 workplan Promote good practice for MIP in 14 focus countries to allow reaching Abuja goals Compile success stories and disseminate evidence base
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