Detailed Mechanism Funding and Narrative

Years of mechanism: 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

Details for Mechanism ID: 13794
Country/Region: Ethiopia
Year: 2014
Main Partner: Oromia Health Bureau - Ethiopia
Main Partner Program: NA
Organizational Type: Host Country Government Agency
Funding Agency: HHS/CDC
Total Funding: $8,230,539 Additional Pipeline Funding: $2,013,170

NOTE: The following is taken from summaries released by PEPFAR on the PEPFAR Data Dashboard. They are incomplete summary paragraphs only and do not contain the full mechanism details. When the full narratives are released, we will update the mechanism pages accordingly.

The Oromia Regional Health Bureau (ORHB) is a local government institution that is the governing body for all health care activities within the Oromia region. Total population of the region is 32,220,001; estimated HIV prevalence for 2015 is 0.8%. A total of 193,621 PLHIV will be living in the region in 2015. The goal of this IM is to successfully transition PEPFAR supported comprehensive HIV treatment, care, support, and prevention activities to ORHB and to ensure uninterrupted delivery of quality services at supported health facilities. This IM aligns with the country’s strategy for sustainability and local ownership. ORHB’s HIV care and treatment facilities’ geographic coverage extends throughout the Region. However PEPFAR support will be focused on high load, high HIV-yield facilities in urban areas, hotspots, and near major transport corridors. Access to key populations will be enhanced by creating a “MARPS friendly” environment within the continuum of HIV services and establishing strong bi-directional linkages with community based outreach groups such as MULU 1. ORHB will leverage human, financial, and infrastructure resources from its own institution and other stakeholders and integrate other health care programs within ORHB to improve efficiency. The ORHB works in alignment with the national HMIS in its M&E of PEPFAR supported program activities. It will report its activities based on PEPFAR indicators under each program area, share best practices, and use site-level data for program improvement. Progress toward transition shall be assessed utilizing milestones described in CU-ICAP’s Transition FOA proposal. It is anticipated that outlay rate will increase as the ORHB assumes functions previously carried out by international implementing partners.

Mechanism Allocation by Budget Code for Selected Year
Care: Adult Care and Support (HBHC) $775,733
Care: TB/HIV (HVTB) $374,231
Care: Pediatric Care and Support (PDCS) $222,568
Laboratory Infrastructure (HLAB) $278,529
Strategic Information (HVSI) $397,747
Health Systems Strengthening (OHSS) $123,309
Biomedical Prevention: Blood Safety (HMBL) $61,915
Biomedical Prevention: Injection Safety (HMIN) $19,875
Testing: HIV Testing and Counseling (HVCT) $74,981
Sexual Prevention: Other Sexual Prevention (HVOP) $145,523
Biomedical Prevention: Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (MTCT) $476,619
Treatment: Adult Treatment (HTXS) $4,617,400
Treatment: Pediatric Treatment (PDTX) $662,109
Mechanism Target Information

Since COP2014, PEPFAR no longer produces narratives for every mechanism it funds. However, PEPFAR has now included performance targets or indicator information for each mechanism based on the Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting (MER) system. The MER guidance is available on PEPFAR's website https://www.pepfar.gov/reports/guidance/. Note that COP years 2014-2015 were under a previous version of the MER system and the indicators and definitions may have changed as of the new 2.0 guidance.

This mechanism has no published performance targets or indicators.

Cross Cutting Budget Categories and Known Amounts Total: $2,778,338
Human Resources for Health $1,000,000
Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery $40,022
Renovation $126,316
Motor Vehicles: Purchased $1,440,000
Water $148,000
Condoms: Policy, Tools, and Services $24,000
Key Issues Identified in Mechanism
enumerations.Malaria (PMI)
Child Survival Activities
Mobile Populations
Safe Motherhood
Tuberculosis
Workplace Programs
Family Planning