| Literature DB >> 28494775 |
Sarah Hawkes1, Kent Buse2, Anuj Kapilashrami3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Global Public Private Partnerships for Health (GPPPH) constitute an increasingly central part of the global health architecture and carry both financial and normative power. Gender is an important determinant of health status, influencing differences in exposure to health determinants, health behaviours, and the response of the health system. We identified 18 GPPPH - defined as global institutions with a formal governance mechanism which includes both public and private for-profit sector actors - and conducted a gender analysis of each.Entities:
Keywords: Gender; Global public private partnerships for health; Mainstreaming; Non-communicable diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28494775 PMCID: PMC5427527 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-017-0249-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1DALY distribution and GPPPH area of work; men. Data and chart available at: https://vizhub.healthdata.org/gbd-compare/
Fig. 2DALY distribution and GPPPH area of work; women. Data and chart available at: https://vizhub.healthdata.org/gbd-compare/
general focus of each partnership included in the analysis
| Global Health Public-Private Partnership | Website address | Mission |
|---|---|---|
| AERAS |
| To develop new, effective TB vaccines that are affordable and accessible to all who need them. |
| DNDi |
| To develop new drugs or new formulations of existing drugs for people living with neglected diseases. |
| FIND diagnostics |
| To turn complex diagnostic challenges into simple solutions to overcome diseases of poverty and transform lives. |
| gain |
| To reduce malnutrition through sustainable market-based strategies aimed at improving the health and nutrition of populations at risk. |
| GAVI |
| To save children’s lives and to protect people’s health by increasing equitable use of vaccines in lower-income countries. |
| Global Health Innovative Technology Fund |
| To facilitate international partnerships that bring Japanese innovation, investment, and leadership to the global fight against infectious diseases and poverty in the developing world. |
| Global Road Safety Partnership |
| To dedicate its partnership to the sustainable reduction of road-crash death and injury in low- and middle-income countries, which suffer 90 per cent of the 1.3 million annual deaths and 50 million serious injuries that arise from road crashes. |
| International Vaccine Institute |
| To discover, develop, and deliver safe, effective and affordable vaccines for global public health. |
| Medicines for Malaria Venture |
| To reduce the burden of malaria in disease-endemic countries by discovering, developing and facilitating delivery of new, effective and affordable antimalarial drugs. |
| Roll Back Malaria |
| To reduce malaria morbidity and mortality by reaching universal coverage and strengthening health systems. |
| Scaling Up Nutrition |
| To ensure high quality and tailored support for efforts to scale up nutrition in line with both national and global targets (e.g., the 6 targets set at the 2012 World Health Assembly). |
| Stop TB Partnership |
| To serve every person who is vulnerable to TB and ensure that high-quality diagnosis, treatment and care is available to all who need it. |
| TB Alliance |
| To dedicate its organisation to the discovery and development of better, faster-acting, and affordable TB drugs that are available to those who need them. |
| The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves |
| To save lives, improve livelihoods, empower women, and protect the environment by creating a thriving global market for clean and efficient household cooking solutions. |
| The Global Fund |
| To attract, manage and disburse additional resources through a new PPP that will make a sustainable and significant contribution to the reduction of infections, illness and death, thereby mitigating the impact caused by HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria in countries in need, and contributing to poverty reduction as part of the MDGs. |
| The Global Public-Private Partnership for Handwashing |
| To drive forward, develop, and share knowledge to strengthen handwashing implementation, build political commitment, and trigger action to promote handwashing at local, national, and international levels, including through advoacy initiatives, such as Global Handwashing Day. |
| The Micronutrient Initiative (Nutrition International) |
| To be a global leader in advancing integrated, innovative and sustainable solutions to reduce vitamin and mineral deficiencies through advocacy, technical and programmatic support, in collabortion with others. |
| The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health |
| To increase the engagement, alignment and accountability of partners, by creating a multi-stakeholder platform that will support the successful implementation of the Global Strategy for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescent’s Health, enabling partners to achieve more together than any individual Partner could do alone. |
Institutional approach to gender within each GPPPH (Includes: definition of gender, presence of gender strategy, gender breakdown on governing board, gender disaggregated reporting)
| Global Health Public Private Partnership | Gender strategy present? | How is gender defined or addressed? | How is gender disaggregated in monitoring and evaluation? | Male: Female representation on governing board |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product Development and Access | ||||
| AERAS | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 6:4 |
| DNDi | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 8:4 |
| FIND diagnostics | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 9:2 |
| International Vaccine Institute | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 8:3 |
| Medicines for Malaria Venture | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 10:3 |
| TB Alliance | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 7:2 |
| Addressing drivers of ill-health and injury | ||||
| GAIN | ✕ | Gender policy recognising impact of gender inequality on nutrition and importance of women’s empowerment to improve nutrition | ✕ | 5:4 |
| Global Health Innovative Technology Fund | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 6:2 |
| Global Road Safety Partnership | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | 10:3 |
| Scaling Up Nutrition | Revise national plans to include issues of women empowerment and nutrition; implement existing principles at sectoral level and track equity and gender sensitive indicators; M&E plans and programs inclusive of women and marginalised groups regularly; build capacity for all participating actors to be more gender-sensitive | Women and girls = deprived groups with financial, social, structure and cultural barriers to services, without right to attain their full potential | Country level report gender balance in management boards; constitutional provisions that specifically promote women’s participation in decision making; gender-responsive policy frameworks (including legislation, policies and budgets) in planning documents; Parliaments that introduced legislative measures to promote gender equality and women’s empowerment | 9:6 |
| The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves | To increase role of women and address gender issues to scale adoption by (1) building evidence and sharing data; (2) building capacity of enterprises; (3) increasing access to finance; (4) raising awareness; (5) setting and influencing policies | Women and girls who breathe in harmful smoke while cooking and spend hours walking far distances to secure cooking fuel | ✕ | 7:4 (leadership council) |
| The Global Public-Private Partnership for Handwashing | ✕ | ✕ | ✕ | ? |
| The Micronutrient Initiative (now called Nutrition International) | ✕ | Women’s and newborn survival and health | Additional pregnant women reached with iron and folic acid; additional people vitamin A and fortified salt | 8:4 |
| Strengthening systems | ||||
| Roll Back Malaria | ✕ | Multisectoral Action Framework mentions gender as a determinant that impacts malaria | ✕ | 10:2 |
| The Global Fund | Action Plan 2014–2016: Gender responsive programming to encourage positive bias in funding programs and activities that address gender inequalities and strengthen response for women and girls; *separate strategy in relation to sexual orientation and gender identities | Women and men, and particularly marginalised and vulnerable “key populations” such as people who use drugs, transgender people, bisexual and lesbian populations, adolescent girls, prisoners, migrants, men who have sex with men, sex workers | Will require countries to collect sex-disaggregated data and gender-sensitive information about population and ensure data available for regular analysis of gender equality approaches in health care services | 15:7 |
| The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health | Gender transformative programming; engaging men as partners in reproductive health; men as agents of change | MDG 3. Promote gender equality and empower women | ✕ | 12:12 |
| Strengthening systems | ||||
| GAVI | Gender policy to scale up gender mainstreaming and promote gender equality by (1) applying gender perspective to all its work; (2) complementing partners’ efforts to promote gender equality in health; (3) promoting country ownership and alignment with regard to gender issues; (4) exercising strong leadership and demonstrating political will; Board Gender Balance (including Members and Alternate) = not more than 60% of either gender represented | Gender used to describe those characteristics of women and men which are socially constructed | Review existing sex-disaggregated data and deciding how to access and analysis, how and if can use to inform decision-making, and what additional data needed to inform appropriate vaccination strategies | 15:12 |
| Stop TB Partnership | In collaboration with UNAIDS and partners; tool to assist countries with assessing their HIV and TB epidemics and responses from a gender perspective, to ensure responses are gender-senstive with gender transformative priorities and actions | Women and girls, men and boys, and more specifically, key vulnerable populations such as sex workers, transgender people, and women and young women who use drugs | Using analysis matrix of: (1) epidemiological data; (2) social-cultural, economic and political context; (3) current HIV/TB policy response; (4) current HIV/TB programming response; idenitfy potential mismatches, gaps and opportunities and indicate how to build on existing interventions in country | 13:12 |
X = not present