PEPFAR's annual planning process is done either at the country (COP) or regional level (ROP).
PEPFAR's programs are implemented through implementing partners who apply for funding based on PEPFAR's published Requests for Applications.
Since 2010, PEPFAR COPs have grouped implementing partners according to an organizational type. We have retroactively applied these classifications to earlier years in the database as well.
Also called "Strategic Areas", these are general areas of HIV programming. Each program area has several corresponding budget codes.
Specific areas of HIV programming. Budget Codes are the lowest level of spending data available.
Expenditure Program Areas track general areas of PEPFAR expenditure.
Expenditure Sub-Program Areas track more specific PEPFAR expenditures.
Object classes provide highly specific ways that implementing partners are spending PEPFAR funds on programming.
Cross-cutting attributions are areas of PEPFAR programming that contribute across several program areas. They contain limited indicative information related to aspects such as human resources, health infrastructure, or key populations programming. However, they represent only a small proportion of the total funds that PEPFAR allocates through the COP process. Additionally, they have changed significantly over the years. As such, analysis and interpretation of these data should be approached carefully. Learn more
Beneficiary Expenditure data identify how PEPFAR programming is targeted at reaching different populations.
Sub-Beneficiary Expenditure data highlight more specific populations targeted for HIV prevention and treatment interventions.
PEPFAR sets targets using the Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting (MER) System - documentation for which can be found on PEPFAR's website at https://www.pepfar.gov/reports/guidance/. As with most data on this website, the targets here have been extracted from the COP documents. Targets are for the fiscal year following each COP year, such that selecting 2016 will access targets for FY2017. This feature is currently experimental and should be used for exploratory purposes only at present.
Years of mechanism: 2008 2009
ACTIVITY UNCHANGED FROM FY 2008
SUMMARY:
The overall project goal is to increase access and availability of safe and effective treatment of HIV and
AIDS in the uninsured population of South Africa. The strategy to achieve this goal focuses on Human
Capacity Development (HCD) through activities that are designed to strengthen the AIDS leadership and
human resource (HR) management at the district level to deal with all aspects of improved service delivery.
BACKGROUND:
The South African Institute of Health Care Managers (SAIHCM) is a Not-for-Profit Association representing
qualified health care managers. SAIHCM was founded with a vision to enhance and promote high standards
of professional health care management in both the public and private sectors in South Africa. SAIHCM
supports HCD through a series of interventions designed to strengthen leadership around HIV and AIDS
and HR management. Coordination with provincial Departments of Health (DOH) takes place through
interaction with District Health Managers to identify participants who will enroll in this program. Equal access
to training activities will be ensured for all people. A gender focus will also be built into the work to be
undertaken in the management development forums. In this context, participants will undertake exercises to
assess gender aspects of their treatment project, looking at such issues as ensuring gender parity in uptake
of testing and treatment, including gender in data collection and promoting activities where all counselors
are trained on aspects relating to male norms and behavior..
To date, efforts to develop AIDS management and leadership in South Africa have focused on providing
training, which is an obvious first step to developing managerial competencies. However, not all managers
are able to attend such training, while others often are not aware of the fact that they do not have the
required skills to effectively undertake their managerial tasks. The default health care manager in South
Africa is a health care professional who has migrated into management (95% of AIDS managers surveyed
in the University of Pretoria study referred to earlier met this profile).
This project is designed to supplement existing management training efforts, by various organizations,
including PEPFAR partners, that focus on providing management qualifications, and to create an alternative
management development method that will develop management competencies of managers who cannot
enroll for formal academic qualifications. This project will also establish, at the district level, continued
professional development structures that will serve all managers from the district.
ACTIVITIES AND EXPECTED RESULTS:
ACTIVITY 1: Professional support services to qualified AIDS managers
The project will, on an annual basis, enroll 500 managers at a district level form both the public sector and
civil society who have formal management qualifications, and therefore qualify as SAIHCM members for a
one-year period. This will introduce them to a series of services customized to support the professional
development of health care managers. These include: 1) a monthly health management journal; 2) access
to the SAIHCM mentorship program; 3) an annual management conference and 4) regular newsletters via e
-mail on health management issues and ethical issues 5) the annual top 25 health care leaders award. As
part of this component, SAIHCM will conduct a survey to build a database of qualified health care managers
in the country. It is anticipated that once managers have experienced the benefits of these services, they or
their employer will take over the payment of membership fees in the following years.
ACTIVITY 2: Assessment of the training and development needs of AIDS managers
On an annual basis, 500 managers who have not received formal management training and managers will
be targeted. This is an internally-focused activity where the individual manager takes stock of his or her own
learning styles, preferences, strengths, weaknesses and development needs. These events are a
sophisticated means of identifying and developing competencies which individuals and teams require taking
on new roles effectively. It provides an in-depth picture of an individual by gathering data from many
sources during a three-day event conducted by a skilled facilitator. The end result is that the management
development needs of each participating health care manager are identified and converted into a personal
development strategy that will include enrolling in formal courses, self study, selected reading and
participating in peer learning events called Action Learning Sets (ALS).
ACTIVITY 3: Establishment of district forums for leadership development for AIDS managers.
SAIHCM will establish 50 Action Learning Sets per annum at the level of the health district. These are
facilitated learning events for managers, which will take place every two months. These one-day sessions
entail a continuous process of learning and reflection with the intention of collectively developing solutions
to tangible problems. Learning is centered on the need to find solutions to a real problems faced by the
managers in implementing AIDS projects. Learning is voluntary and learner-driven, while individual
development is as important as finding the solution to the problem. Action Learning is an approach to
management development pioneered by Reg Revans . It is based on his premise that "there can be no
learning without action and no sober and deliberate action without learning. Revans described learning as
having two elements: namely traditional instruction and critical reflection or questioning insight. He
maintained that learning equals programmed learning plus questioning insights. The Action Learning Set
(ALS) is designed to predominantly support the critical reflection component of learning. ALSes are learning
groups comprised of 10-20 members, including a facilitator. The set will meet one day every 6-8 weeks.
Attendance and commitment creates a culture of mutual support and challenge. Groups normally have a
facilitator whose main responsibility is helping the group create a culture that is supportive and challenging.
SAIHCM will further provide ALS members with access to a mentor, who will be an AIDS manager that has
a formal management qualification and who has received a complimentary SAIHCM membership on the
Activity Narrative: basis of their willingness to fulfill this role. The supervision by a SAIHCM facilitator will only be required for
the first six-month period. Learning is centered on the need to find solutions to real problems faced by the
managers in implementing AIDS projects. Once the ALS structures have been established they continue
under an elected group leader as forums for continuous professional development, peer support,
mechanism to improve morale and forums where collaboration between managers from both the public and
the private sector can be promoted. SAIHCM will continuously monitor that the ALS remain active and
actively support group leaders to ensure continuation. SAIHCM will, on a two monthly basis, interact with
group leaders via a dedicated web-based discussion forum and newsletter. The purpose of this interaction
is to provide group leaders with subject matter for the bi-monthly meetings and share the hot topics for
discussion identified by other districts. Annually, group leaders will convene at the SAIHCM Conference.
Articles produced by or relevant to the ALSes will be published in the SAIHCM Journal to further share
lessons learned with the broader health management community.
ACTIVITY 4: Workplace visits
Depending on need and funding SAIHCM will attempt to arrange a supervisory visit to the workplace of all
the managers enrolled on this program during the first year of participation. The purpose of these visits will
be to review that application of managerial competencies in the workplace with the participating manager, to
help identify opportunities to improve service delivery as well as potential challenges and obstacles that
these managers face that can be addressed in the monthly training sessions.
The anticipated outcomes of the project will be that every year:
400 AIDS managers who had never previously been trained in management will have participated in a
formal assessment of the managerial competencies and other skills needed to function as AIDS Managers.
They will have developed personal development plans and been channeled to formal training opportunities
offered by PEPFAR training partners or enrolled in the district-based management development forums.
20 district-based development forums will have been established where AIDS managers from all sectors
meet on a regular basis to participate in problem-solving brainstorming events and other Continuing
Professional Development (CPD) events.
Implementation of this project will rely on developing partnerships with various role players at the district
level involved in AIDS service delivery and capacity development.
Training institutions: SAIHCM already has a close working relationship with the Foundation for Professional
Development (FPD), a private institution of higher education, and also a PEPFAR training partner. In this
context SAIHCM provides alumni of FPD management training programs access to SAIHCM membership
benefits. This relationship will be leveraged to create a conduit to channel managers into sponsored formal
clinical and managerial training courses offered by FPD. SAIHCM will also actively engage other PEPFAR
partners who offer training, using the PEPFAR training catalogue with the same objective. Any AIDS
manager who is a graduate from a formal training program such as those offered by FPD, will also be
invited to attend the ALSes as a way for them to engage in life-long learning.
PEPFAR Partners and Civil Society AIDS Service organizations: SAIHCM will also engage PEPFAR
partners and other AIDS service organizations form civil society to invite their managers to participate in the
project. An added benefit of involving civil society leaders and managers is that it will create a forum where
the district-level leaders from both the public and the private sector will interact, leading to increased public-
private partnerships.
Provincial Government: SAIHCM will work in partnership with the Human Resources Departments of the
provincial Departments of Health in the all provinces to develop the capacity of AIDS managers at the
district level based on the outcomes of the ALSes. The District Health Services competency framework is
one that was introduced in the pilot phase with full support of provincial and National Health Department
management. The Health Systems Framework will guide the project. All interventions will be aligned
developing the competencies to implement this framework.
New/Continuing Activity: Continuing Activity
Continuing Activity: 21170
Continued Associated Activity Information
Activity Activity ID USG Agency Prime Partner Mechanism Mechanism ID Mechanism Planned Funds
System ID System ID
21170 21170.08 U.S. Agency for South African 9228 9228.08 $640,316
International Institute of Health
Development Care Managers
Emphasis Areas
Gender
* Increasing gender equity in HIV/AIDS programs
Human Capacity Development
Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Human Capacity Development $640,316
Public Health Evaluation
Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery
Food and Nutrition: Commodities
Economic Strengthening
Education
Water
Table 3.3.09: