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 HAS BEEN MODIFIED IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS:
ACTIVITY 1: The Rollout and Training on Child Healthcare Problem Identification Program (Child PIP)
The training package has been developed and will be available to all sites. It will be used for training at the
provincial workshops as well as by individual provincial coordinators at sites.
ACTIVITY 2: Saving Children Report
The process of compiling the fourth Saving Children Report will begin during FY 2008 and the report will be
published and disseminated during FY 2009. The executive summary will be published as a separate
advocacy document and distributed widely.
ACTIVITY 5: Provincial Workshops to be Held During FY 2008
The provincial coordinators have planned workshops that will suit the needs in each individual province.
Four of the provinces will be conducting individual provincial workshops (Eastern Cape, Free State,
KwaZulu-Natal and Western Cape). Gauteng and North West will be conducting a combined promotional
workshop, and Mpumalanga and Limpopo a combined training workshop. In the Northern Cape, the
provincial coordinator is conducting smaller Child PIP training sessions in each district.
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SUMMARY:
The Child Healthcare Problem Identification Programme (ChIP) is a University of Pretoria prevention of
mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) monitoring project aimed at improving the quality of PMTCT service
delivery. Using PEPFAR funds in FY 2005, FY 2006 and FY 2007, the foundations for ChIP were
established. FY 2008 funding will be used to continue monitoring the impact of:
(1) properly managing HIV-infected pregnant women and their children;
(2) the intervention on perinatal and infant mortality; and
(3) cotrimoxazole prophylaxis, infant feeding choice and antiretroviral therapy on HIV-infected children.
The premise of ChIP is that through ongoing monitoring and analysis of data on child deaths, key indicators
can be identified, which will provide health-care providers and policy makers with the necessary empirical
basis from which to advocate for the design and implementation of improved quality of care strategies. In
the long term, this approach should make a significant contribution toward reduced childhood mortality from
HIV and other causes. The major emphasis of the work falls in Health Management Information Systems,
with a lesser emphasis on monitoring, evaluation and reporting, as well as other strategic information (SI)
activities. Target populations for the activity include infants and children, HIV-infected pregnant women, HIV
-infected infants and children, policy makers, and public and private health-care workers.
BACKGROUND:
HIV infection has a major impact on fetal, infant and child mortality. The impact on fetuses is mostly indirect,
resulting in pre-term delivery, growth restriction or infection; whereas, children younger than age 5 tend to
die from the direct results of the HIV infection. The Perinatal Problem Identification Programme (PPIP)
currently monitors perinatal mortality in South Africa. Prior to FY 2005, there was no routine collection of
information on the causes of death in children, nor was there a methodology to determine the impact of
PMTCT. With FY 2005 and FY 2006 PEPFAR funding, and in collaboration with the National Department of
Health (NDOH), the PPIP system was updated to include fields for antiretroviral therapy (ART) during
pregnancy and neonatal nevirapine administration. These updates will allow the NDOH to determine the
uptake of antiretroviral treatment (ART) in children and the number of children dying from HIV-related
infections, as well as provide an indirect proxy for the impact of PMTCT.
Health-care workers were trained to use the PPIP and ChIP monitoring systems. Analysis of the 2005 data
from 26 sites indicated that only 65% of children who died had an HIV test and of these, 82% were exposed
or infected. In addition, of the children who died, 49% did not receive appropriate cotrimoxazole prophylaxis,
and only 15% of those children qualifying for ART received it. Although the purpose of ChIP is to monitor
the causes of death in children, particularly as they relate to HIV, it also enables hospitals to identify
preventable causes of death and identify strategies to address them. Health professionals from these sites
were trained to use ChIP, and to understand how the data obtained from the program can feedback into
improving the quality of health care for children. Because of this quality improvement feedback mechanism,
ChIP has become a valuable tool that affects morbidity and mortality, and service delivery as a whole.
ACTIVITIES AND EXPECTED RESULTS:
Five activities will be carried out in this program area.
ACTIVITY 1: The Rollout and Training on ChIP
FY 2008 funding will be used to continue promoting, supporting, and expanding ChIP implementation
across South Africa. This will include a national data sharing workshop and the development of training
packages for 22 sites (12 established and 10 in-training sites). A minimum of two health professionals from
each site will be trained, better ensuring sustainability. Sites will be monitored and evaluated annually to
assess quality and sustainability, as well as to ensure that ChIP is used as a quality improvement
mechanism. The project has established linkages with the national and provincial departments of health,
and will continue to liaise with the NDOH.
Activity Narrative: ACTIVITY 2: Saving Children Report
With FY 2005, FY 2006 and FY 2007 funding, ChIP used data from the existing sites to develop three
annual versions of the Saving Children Report. In FY 2008, data from established sites will be used to
compile the fourth annual Saving Children Report. The target audience for the report is healthcare workers
and policy makers. It is anticipated that the fourth report will be used to highlight gaps and challenges within
child health service delivery, giving special attention to HIV, as well as to advocate for the implementation of
recommendations aimed at improving quality of care for HIV-exposed and -infected infants and children.
The reports will be disseminated at national and provincial level to ensure continued communication with
the NDOH and to ensure further expansion of the project in FY 2009.
ACTIVITY 3: Strengthening Linkages
This activity focuses on strengthening the linkages between ChIP and PPIP sites to provide information on
improving the quality of PMTCT service delivery. Data from the updated PPIP (which focuses on PMTCT
compliance) will be analyzed and the impact of PMTCT at these sites will be assessed using ChIP data.
Improved PMTCT service delivery will be achieved through feedback of this information to the department
of health at facility, provincial and national levels.
FY 2008 activities will be expanded to include:
ACTIVITY 4: Setting up a ChIP Technical Task Team
During FY 2007 a ChIP Technical Task Team was established. The team is comprised of the ChIP Exco, a
representative from each province, as well as one or two specialist members. The roles of the Task Teams
are to provide provincial leadership (identify, train and support local sites, liaise with the Maternal, Child
and Women's Health (MCWH) Unit and strengthen links with PPIP); to assist with planning of the national
and provincial workshops; to contribute to the Saving Children report; and to provide general assistance to
the ChIP Exco.
FY 2008 funding will be used to conduct provincial ChIP workshops in each of the nine provinces. Data will
be presented and further training offered to strengthen sites and expand ChIP. These workshops will also
provide healthcare workers with the opportunity to share quality improvement projects that were
implemented as a result of the site specific and provincial data that can be abstracted from ChIP.
ChIP contributes to the PEPFAR goals by strengthening PMTCT information and monitoring systems, and
ensuring a quality of care feedback mechanism aimed at improving quality of care for HIV-infected children.
In addition, this project contributes to PEPFAR's 2-7-10 objectives by early identification of children born to
HIV-infected mothers and linking them to appropriate treatment and care programs.
New/Continuing Activity: Continuing Activity
Continuing Activity: 13863
Continued Associated Activity Information
Activity Activity ID USG Agency Prime Partner Mechanism Mechanism ID Mechanism Planned Funds
System ID System ID
13863 3796.08 HHS/Centers for University of 6635 2823.08 University of $270,000
Disease Control & Pretoria, South Pretoria - MRC
Prevention Africa Unit
7434 3796.07 HHS/Centers for University of 4417 2823.07 University of $250,000
3796 3796.06 HHS/Centers for University of 2823 2823.06 University of $150,000
Emphasis Areas
Health-related Wraparound Programs
* Child Survival Activities
Human Capacity Development
Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Human Capacity Development $123,100
Public Health Evaluation
Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery
Food and Nutrition: Commodities
Economic Strengthening
Education
Water
Table 3.3.17: