AI Article Synopsis

  • Due to decreasing donor funding for HIV programs in low- and middle-income countries, efforts are being made to integrate HIV prevention into public health systems to ensure long-term sustainability, particularly in Zambia's voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) program.
  • A framework was created to explore how individual decision-makers within the government may create barriers in shifting funding support from NGOs to government structures, through interviews with key stakeholders in the Ministry of Health and other involved parties.
  • The study identified three key decision-making phases for the transition to a sustainable VMMC program: developing a new funding strategy, creating policies for infant and adolescent male circumcision, and finding efficient implementation models, highlighting the behavioral dynamics that impede effective

Article Abstract

Faced with declining donor funding for HIV, low- and middle-income countries must identify efficient and cost-effective ways to integrate HIV prevention programs into public health systems for long-term sustainability. In Zambia, donor support to the voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) program, which previously funded non-governmental organizations as implementing partners, is increasingly being directed through government structures instead. We developed a framework to understand how the behaviors of individual decision-makers within the government could be barriers to this transition. We interviewed key stakeholders from the national, provincial, and district levels of the Ministry of Health, and from donors and partners funding and implementing Zambia's VMMC program, exploring the decisions required to attain a sustainable VMMC program and the behavioral dynamics involved at personal and institutional levels. Using pattern identification and theme matching to analyze the content of the responses, we derived three core decision-making phases in the transition to a sustainable VMMC program: 1) developing an alternative funding strategy, 2) developing a policy for early-infant (0-2 months) and early-adolescent (15-17 years) male circumcision, which is crucial to sustainable HIV prevention; and 3) identifying integrated and efficient implementation models. We formulated a framework showing how, in each phase, a range of behavioral dynamics can form barriers that hinder effective decision-making among stakeholders at the same level (e.g., national ministries and donors) or across levels (e.g., national, provincial and district). Our research methodology and the resulting framework offer a systematic approach for in-depth investigations into organizational decision-making in public health programs, as well as development programs beyond VMMC and HIV prevention. It provides the insights necessary to map organizational development and policy-making transition plans to sustainability, by explaining tangible factors such as organizational processes and systems, as well as intangibles such as the behaviors of policymakers and institutional actors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11421490PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.15189.2DOI Listing

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