| Literature DB >> 26416543 |
Isabel Yan1, Eline Korenromp2,3, Eran Bendavid4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since its founding in 2002, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (Global Fund) has become the dominant multilateral health financier in low- and middle-income countries. The health impact of the Global Fund remains unknown because existing evaluations measure intermediate outcomes or do not account for preexisting and counterfactual trends.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26416543 PMCID: PMC4587875 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2305-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 4.135
Fig. 1Geographical distribution of Global Fund support. Countries are shaded according to the tertile of per capita total Global Fund disbursements between 2002 and 2010, from lowest (lightest) to highest (darkest)
Descriptive characteristics of countries, at different levels Global Fund per capita disbursements
| All Eligible counties | Highest tertile | Middle tertile | Lowest tertile | % imputed data | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of countries | 152 | 51 | 51 | 50 | -- |
| Average real GDP per capita in 2002–2010 (in constant 2005 international dollar) | 6426 | 3720 | 5174 | 10,406 | 0 % |
| Average public health expenditure per capita (net of GF) in 2002–2010 (in constant 2005 US dollars) | 216 | 118 | 145 | 349 | 0.23 % |
| Average percentage of population living in urban area in 2002-2010 | 48 | 37 | 49 | 58 | 0 % |
| Total Global Fund disbursements per capita (in constant 2005 US dollars) | 1.08 | 2.68 | 0.71 | 0.10 | 0 % |
| 2002-2006 | 0.57 | 1.40 | 0.38 | 0.05 | |
| 2007-2010 | 1.73 | 4.30 | 1.12 | 0.16 | |
| All-cause adult mortality rate2 | |||||
| 1995 | 246 | 316 | 254 | 171 | 0 % |
| 2002 | 247 | 331 | 259 | 156 | 0 % |
| 2007 | 241 | 326 | 253 | 150 | 0 % |
| 2008 | 238 | 323 | 250 | 147 | 0 % |
| 2009 | 236 | 321 | 248 | 144 | 0 % |
| 2010 | 235 | 318 | 245 | 144 | 0 % |
| All-cause under-five mortality rate3 | |||||
| 1995 | 77 | 104 | 86 | 41 | 0 % |
| 2002 | 62 | 86 | 70 | 33 | 0 % |
| 2007 | 54 | 74 | 61 | 27 | 0 % |
| 2008 | 52 | 73 | 60 | 26 | 0 % |
| 2009 | 51 | 72 | 58 | 25 | 0 % |
| 2010 | 50 | 71 | 57 | 25 | 0 % |
Notes:
1Funding groupings used Global Fund disbursements for all sectors (HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria and Health Systems Strengthening)
2Adult mortality is expressed as the probability that a 15-year-old person would die by age 59 per 1000 adults (45q15)
3Child mortality is expressed as the number of deaths before age 5 per 1000 live births (5q0)
Fig. 2Mortality trends relative to year of first Global Fund disbursements among eligible countries, divided into tertiles of per capita disbursements: a all-cause adult mortality, b all-cause under-five mortality, and c malaria-specific under-five mortality. The mortality rate of each country is presented as the difference between the country’s year-specific mortality and its mean mortality between 1995 and 2010 (de-meaned). Each funding group’s mortality rate is the average of the de-meaned values for all countries within the group, thus removing from the graphs the large mortality level differences between groups that persisted throughout the time period evaluated (see Table 1), and approximating the fixed-effects regression. For each country, Year 0 represents the first year of support from the Global Fund
Relationship of Global Fund support to adult and under-five mortality changes
| All-cause adult mortality | All-cause under-five mortality | Malaria-specific child mortality | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (p-value)5 | (p-value)5 | (p-value)5,6 | |
| Global Fund $ per capita1 | −0.0014 (0.005) | −0.0005 (0.33) | −0.0069 (0.033) |
| Global Fund $ per capita × HWD2 | 0.0013 (0.72) | −0.0005 (0.25) | 0.0016 (0.40) |
| Health workforce density (HWD) 2 | −0.0021 (0.090) | −0.0022 (0.11) | −0.0094 (0.15) |
| GDPpc (logged, in 2005 USD, PPP adjusted)3 | −0.0587 (0.16) | −0.1484 (0.067) | −0.6625 (0.032) |
| % of urban population | 0.0010 (0.77) | −0.0050 (0.23) | 0.0178 (0.54) |
| Health expenditure per capita (logged, in 2005 USD)4 | −0.0018 (0.92) | −0.0078 (0.60) | −0.0503 (0.55) |
| Number of countries | 147 | 147 | 55 |
| Number of country-year observations | 2322 | 2322 | 856 |
Notes:
1Global Fund disbursements per capita in constant 2005 USD. A significant negative coefficient indicates effectiveness of Global Fund in bending down the mortality trend. The coefficient indicates that the mortality rate declined by coefficient × 100 percent faster per year for every $1 increase in per capita disbursements
2HWD is health workforce density, defined as the number of doctors and nurses per 100,000 population, an indicator of health system capacity. All HWD estimates were log-transformed. The interactions between HWD and the Global Fund variables indicate whether, at any level of Global Fund exposure, the observed outcomes changed based on HWD. The coefficient of the interactive term measures how the health workforce density in a country modifies the effectiveness of Global Fund in changing the mortality trend. There is no evidence that the effect of Global Fund on mortality was meaningfully different based on health system capacity as measured through HWD
3Gross domestic product per capita, log-transformed, in 2005 USD, adjusted for purchasing power parity
4Total health expenditures minus Global Fund disbursements from all sources per capita in 2005 USD
5Mortality rates are log-transformed, so that the coefficient values can be interpreted as the additional annual proportional change in mortality with each additional year of support from the Global Fund (see numerical examples in Results text)
6The malaria-specific models analyze countries with high, severe or extreme malaria burden. According to the Global Fund’s eligibility criteria, these are the countries with burden defined as high, severe, or extreme; countries with low or moderate burden were excluded, resulting in the analysis of 55 countries. Only malaria grants were used to examine malaria-specific mortality