Detailed Mechanism Funding and Narrative

Years of mechanism: 2008 2009

Details for Mechanism ID: 7211
Country/Region: Côte d'Ivoire
Year: 2009
Main Partner: Program for Appropriate Technology in Health
Main Partner Program: NA
Organizational Type: NGO
Funding Agency: USAID
Total Funding: $0

Funding for Biomedical Prevention: Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (MTCT): $200,000

Nutrition support, an important aspect of comprehensive prevention, treatment, and care services, has been

limited in many PEPFAR-supported programs. In an effort to develop and implement a nutrition strategy and

services for PEPFAR-supported HIV/AIDS programs in Cote d'Ivoire, the USG team significantly increased

its investments, starting with FY07 plus-up funds, to strengthen this area of work.

In FY08, IYCN/PATH received funding in the OVC program area to support the continued development,

evaluation, and implementation of strategies that PATH had been undertaking under a subcontract to other

PEPFAR partners to improve the quality and targeted provision of nutrition support to OVC, including infants

of sero-positive mothers in PMTCT services, as well as pregnant and lactating women.

PATH provides technical support in nutrition and infant feeding in collaboration with national partners (the

national programs for nutrition (PNN), HIV/AIDS care and treatment (PNPEC), child health (PNSI), OVC

(PNOEV), reproductive health (PNSR), and public health (INSP)), as well as the International Baby Food

Action Network (IBFAN-CI), Stratégie Accélerée pour la Survie et le Développement de l'Enfant (SASDE),

PEPFAR partners for PMTCT (EGPAF, ACONDA, and ICAP), and PEPFAR partners for OVC (ANADER,

Care International, Hope Worldwide, the World Food Program, AED/FANTA, RIP+, Le Soutien, FHI,

Geneva Global, and the Ministry of Education). PATH's technical assistance consists of strengthening the

capacity of partners as well as health workers at PMTCT sites to provide:

- Appropriate infant feeding, counseling, support, and follow-up for all HIV-exposed infants and mothers,

along with a package of child-survival and reproductive-health interventions with linkages to HIV prevention,

treatment, and care services.

- Nutritional assessment, counseling, and support as an integrated part of care, including routine

assessment of anthropometric status, nutrition-related symptoms, and diet, with therapeutic or

supplementary feeding support for malnourished clients.

- Linkages to food aid and social services that can assist in the assessment and support of household food

security.

- Training for health workers.

- Wrap-around nutrition support provided as part of PMTCT.

In addition to FY09 funding as a PEPFAR prime partner, PATH/IYCN is expected to receive subgrants from

PEPFAR PMTCT partners (EGPAF, ACONDA, ICAP) to continue to provide technical assistance to PMTCT

sites and OVC care providers as well as to the PNN and the World Food Program (WFP) to develop and

implement nutrition activities. Technical assistance will help strengthen, disseminate, and apply national

nutrition policies and practices for persons living with or affected by HIV/AIDS.

With FY09 prime-partner and subpartner funding, PATH will provide food and nutrition support to 40% of

PMTCT sites (approximately 154/385 PMTCT sites) and training for 150 health workers by September 2009

and reach 60% of PMTCT sites (approximately 300/500 PMTCT sites) and train another 150 health workers

between October 2009 and March 2010. (PEPFAR targets associated with this PATH/IYCN activity are

lower, reflecting only prime-partner funding: 74 PMTCT sites by September 2009, with training for 40

persons, and a total of 110 PMTCT sites by March 2010, with 40 additional persons trained). Specific

activities will include:

• Plan and initiate integrated scale-up of infant feeding and nutrition activities at additional PMTCT sites,

with a goal of achieving 40% coverage of existing and new PMTCT sites by September 2009 and 60%

coverage by March 2010.

By March 2009, PATH will have supported infant feeding and nutrition activities at 68 PMTCT sites

throughout the country. With FY09 funding, PATH will work closely with the PNN and PNPEC to develop

and implement an overall scale-up plan, with objectives and targets, for integrated nutrition and infant

feeding care as an essential component of PMTCT services at new sites. PATH will also work with health

district teams to ensure that nutrition activities are integrated into PMTCT micro-plans in targeted districts.

Revision of relevant national policies and guidelines in accordance with the 2006 WHO Consensus

statement, started in FY08, will be completed by September 2009. IEC materials (counseling cards and take

-home brochures) and clinical tools (algorithms and infant postpartum follow-up forms and routines) used at

demonstration sites will be produced and disseminated on a wide scale to support integrated scale-up. In

addition to its work with EGPAF, ACONDA, and ICAP, PATH will also provide technical assistance and

materials, as needed to help reach target groups of other national, international, and PEPFAR partners.

• Strengthen the capacity of Ministry of Health (MOH) district offices in each of five zones (San Pedro,

Abengourou, Yamoussoukro, Bouake, Man) to integrate and scale up infant feeding and nutrition activities.

Building on FY08 work and a new commitment from national partners to significantly scale up infant feeding

and nutrition interventions as critical components of PMTCT services, IYCN/PATH will move from

demonstration activities at a limited number of sites to support scale-up at existing PMTCT sites and

integration of infant feeding and nutrition care at new sites. PATH will carry out district capacity building

necessary to initiate and carry out high-quality integration and rapid scale-up of nutrition activities, in

coordination with the PNPEC, district medical officers, and the PNN. In each of the five zones, PATH will

work closely with the district health team (ECD) to plan, implement, and coordinate nutrition activities as

part of district micro-plans. Staff from PATH will be assigned to one major health district team and will work

with several surrounding districts:

1. San Pedro (Tabou, Sassandra, Soubre, Lakota, Gagnoa, Issia , Daloa)

2. Abengourou (Agnibilekro, Tanda, Bondoukou, Bongouanou, Agboville, Alepe)

3. Yamoussokro (Daoukro, Toumodi, Dimbokro, Oume, Sinfra, Bouafle, Zuenoula)

4. Bouake (Katiola, Dabakala, Ferke, Korhogo, Boundiali)

5. Man (Biankouma, Touba, Odienne, Danane, Toulepleu, Guiglo)

Additional PATH technical staff based in Abidjan will cover PMTCT sites outside of these five zones and

will follow activities in the field.

Because of the increased scale-up pace proposed for FY09, PATH will use a more streamlined training plan

Activity Narrative: than in FY08. The training plan will include:

- Orienting health district directors and teams in targeted districts

- Training of two health workers from each PMTCT site that has not yet received infant feeding support as

well as one staff member from the health district team using a combination of the six-day revised integrated

course on breastfeeding, nutrition and HIV; a two-day orientation; and/or on-site refresher trainings

- Distributing clinical algorithms, counseling materials, follow-up forms and guides, and posters

Trained staff in each district will serve as trainers and will help with supportive follow-up of all sites covered

by the district.

At new PMTCT sites, essential elements of infant feeding and nutrition will be integrated into initial PMTCT

trainings, and infant-feeding materials will be distributed as part of all PMTCT trainings. In consultation with

the district medical officer, a training plan for each district will be prepared and implemented that will allow

for one staff person per new site to be trained in the six-day revised integrated course, with other staff

receiving a two-day orientation or on-site trainings. Additional staff will be trained in subsequent years, with

prioritization given to sites that have achieved site-specific milestones in improved infant-feeding services.

The specific milestones will be drawn from the new infant feeding/postpartum follow-up forms and routines

and will be determined in consultation with district medical officers. This training and milestone plan will be

finalized with the district medical officers in the identified districts and adapted as needed.

After training, follow-up visits will help ensure that infant follow-up forms and routines are being

implemented appropriately. Additional support materials will be disseminated, and periodic supportive

supervision will monitor and improve quality and uptake at sites. In some cases, distribution of tools and

materials may precede formal trainings, in order to facilitate scale-up and adoption of new routines.

Interventions will also improve service quality and strengthen collaboration among PMTCT, pediatric

treatment, social services, and the community.

• Integrate HIV and Nutrition in pre-service training curricula for health providers (INFAS)

PATH will provide technical assistance to revise national pre-service training curricula for midwives and

nurses (INFAS) in collaboration with the PNN, PNPEC, and FHI.

• Equip PMTCT sites and rural health centers, in collaboration with national programs, ANADER, and other

partners

In collaboration with international partners (UNICEF,WHO) and PEPFAR partners, PATH will support the

national programs (PNN, PNPEC) to adapt national minimum standards for equipment for PMTCT services.

Fifty PMTCT sites and five rural health centers supported by ANADER will be equipped with tools needed to

monitor infant growth (measuring ribbon, infant feeding cup, weight measure, materials for diet

demonstrations) after a situational analysis conducted in collaboration with the PNPEC, PNN, and the

health districts.

• Develop a guide of monthly topics for HIV support groups, in order to expand access to appropriate

services at facilities and encourage good feeding and nutrition practices at home.

Given the importance of psychosocial support and positive living for people infected or affected by HIV,

PATH in FY08 is working to strengthen existing support groups and initiate the creation of new support

groups at PMTCT sites. In FY09,

PATH will collaborate with the PNN, PNPEC, and RIP+ (national PLWHA network to develop monthly

discussion topics for HIV support groups as well as a guide to creating a support group and messages

about the importance of routine follow-up, delivery at health facilities, immunization, cotrimoxazole

prophylaxis, nutrition, and disclosure of HIV status to partners.

PATH will share its work plan with the PNN and PNPEC in order to strengthen collaborative relationships

and to assist in providing coordinated assistance to health care sites. PATH will use its M&E system to

provide timely, accurate reports to national authorities and the USG strategic information team. To help

build a unified national M&E system, PATH will participate in quarterly SI meetings and will implement

decisions taken during these meetings.

New/Continuing Activity: New Activity

Continuing Activity:

Emphasis Areas

Health-related Wraparound Programs

* Child Survival Activities

Human Capacity Development

Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Human Capacity Development $140,000

Public Health Evaluation

Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery

Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools $60,000

and Service Delivery

Food and Nutrition: Commodities

Economic Strengthening

Education

Water

Table 3.3.01:

Funding for Care: Pediatric Care and Support (PDCS): $300,000

Nutrition support, an important aspect of comprehensive treatment, palliative care, and OVC services, has

been limited in many PEPFAR-supported programs. In an effort to develop and implement a comprehensive

nutrition strategy and services for PEPFAR-supported HIV/AIDS programs in Cote d'Ivoire, the USG country

team significantly increased their investments, starting with FY07 plus-up funds, to strengthen this area of

work.

With FY08 funding in the OVC program area, IYCN/PATH is supporting the continued development,

evaluation, and implementation of strategies that PATH had been undertaking under a subcontract to other

PEPFAR partners for improving the quality and targeted provision of nutrition support to OVCs, including

infants of sero-positive mothers in PMTCT services, as well as pregnant and lactating women.

PATH provides technical support in nutrition and infant feeding in collaboration with national partners (the

national programs for nutrition (PNN), HIV/AIDS care and treatment (PNPEC), child health (PNSI), OVC

(PNOEV), reproductive health (PNSR), and public health (INSP)), as well as the International Baby Food

Action Network (IBFAN-CI), Stratégie Accélerée pour la Survie et le Développement de l'Enfant (SASDE),

PEPFAR partners for PMTCT (EGPAF, ACONDA, and ICAP), and PEPFAR partners for OVC (ANADER,

Care International, Hope Worldwide, the World Food Program, AED/FANTA, RIP+, Le Soutien, FHI,

Geneva Global, and the Ministry of Education). PATH's technical assistance consists of strengthening the

capacity of partners to provide:

- Appropriate infant feeding, counseling, support, and follow-up for all HIV-exposed infants and mothers,

along with a package of child-survival and reproductive-health interventions with linkages to HIV prevention,

treatment, and pediatric care services

- Nutritional assessment, counseling, and support as an integrated part of care, including routine

assessment of anthropometric status, nutrition-related symptoms, and diet, with therapeutic or

supplementary feeding support for malnourished clients

- Linkages to food aid and social services that can assist in the assessment and support of household food

security

- Trraining for social workers, community workers, and OVC caregivers

- Wrap-around nutrition support provided as part of home-based palliative and OVC care.

With FY09 funding, PATH will continue to provide technical assistance to PEPFAR-supported facility- and

community-based OVC care providers as well as to the PNN and WFP to develop and implement nutrition

activities. Under PNN and PNPEC coordination, technical assistance will strengthen, disseminate, and

apply national policies on nutrition for persons living with or affected by HIV/AIDS.

Consistent with the literature on the close relationship between malnutrition and HIV, a situational analysis

published in 2005 in Côte d'Ivoire showed that 25% of OVC are malnourished. Treating malnutrition in

infected infants is a critical component of managing their HIV/AIDS care. Identification of malnutrition in

infants and young children can also be used as an additional entry point for infant testing and early initiation

of HAART.

In collaboration with the PNPEC, PNOEV and PNN, PATH will strengthen the capacity of Stratégie

Accélerée pour la Survie et le Développement de l'Enfant (SASDE, an MOH project) and PEPFAR care

partners (ACONDA, EGPAF, and ICAP) to address this issue by:

• Revising guidelines, policies, training curricula, job aids, and IEC materials (as needed) on palliative care

and clinic-based therapeutic care for malnourished infants

• Strengthening the capacity of government therapeutic nutritional centers (UNTs and CNTs), in

collaboration with national programs (PNN, PNPEC) and international partners (UNICEF,WHO) by:

- Developing a two-day update of UNT and CNT staff regarding malnutrition and HIV

- Adapting the national document on minimum standards for equipment (e.g. measuring ribbon, infant

feeding cup, weight measure, materials for dietary demonstrations, therapeutic food) for UNT and CNT

services to ensure appropriate therapeutic nutrition care.

• Developing guidelines for the identification of malnourished infants in the community, as well as referral

systems for appropriate clinic-based therapeutic care for these infants. Community workers will be involved

in identifying malnourished infants in the community (using measuring ribbons (MUAC) and referring them

to health centers, UNTs, or CNTs), and the infants will be referred for care for malnutrition and HIV testing.

Community agents will also be involved in following nutritional rehabilitation in the community. To avoid lost

to follow-up, links will be created among the community, health and social services, counseling and testing

services, and pediatric care and treatment centers.

To coordinate these activities and assure high quality of services PATH will hire one person to coordinate

its pediatric care activities.

PATH's M&E system will send timely, accurate reports to national authorities and the USG strategic

information team. To help build a unified national M&E system, PATH will participate in quarterly SI

meetings and will implement decisions taken during these meetings.

New/Continuing Activity: New Activity

Continuing Activity:

Emphasis Areas

Health-related Wraparound Programs

* Child Survival Activities

Human Capacity Development

Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Human Capacity Development $150,000

Public Health Evaluation

Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery

Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools $150,000

and Service Delivery

Food and Nutrition: Commodities

Economic Strengthening

Education

Water

Program Budget Code: 11 - PDTX Treatment: Pediatric Treatment

Total Planned Funding for Program Budget Code: $2,200,000

Total Planned Funding for Program Budget Code: $0

Table 3.3.11:

Funding for Care: Orphans and Vulnerable Children (HKID): $500,000

ACTIVITY HAS BEEN MODIFIED IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS

• Integrating HIV and Nutrition into the pre-service training curricula of social workers (INFS and INJS);

• Strengthening the capacity of the national OVC trainers in Nutrition and HIV;

• Using the strategies of other OVC PEPFAR partners to spread sensitization messages to the target

population;

• Provide basic equipment to OVC social centers and community health workers in collaboration with

national programs and other partners;

• Conduct a situational analysis to research food mapping by zones (North, West, East, Center) and

propose adapted recipes appropriate for OVCs 6-24 months of age

• Support the creation and animation of HIV support groups at social centers

COMPLETE NARRATIVE

Nutrition support, an important aspect of comprehensive treatment, palliative care, and OVC services, has

been limited in many PEPFAR-supported programs. In an effort to develop and implement a comprehensive

nutrition strategy and services for PEPFAR-supported HIV/AIDS programs in Cote d'Ivoire, the USG country

team significantly increased their investments, starting with FY07 plus-up funds, to strengthen this area of

work.

In FY08, IYCN/PATH received funding to support the continued development, evaluation, and

implementation of strategies that PATH had been undertaking under a subcontract to other PEPFAR

partners for improving the quality and targeted provision of nutrition support to OVCs, including infants of

sero-positive mothers in PMTCT services, as well as pregnant and lactating women.

PATH provides technical support in nutrition and infant feeding in collaboration with national partners (the

national programs for nutrition (PNN), HIV/AIDS care and treatment (PNPEC), child health (PNSI), OVC

(PNOEV), reproductive health (PNSR), and public health (INSP)), as well as the International Baby Food

Action Network (IBFAN-CI), Stratégie Accélerée pour la Survie et le Développement de l'Enfant (SASDE),

PEPFAR partners for PMTCT (EGPAF, ACONDA, and ICAP), and PEPFAR partners for OVC (ANADER,

Care International, Hope Worldwide, the World Food Program, AED/FANTA, RIP+, Le Soutien, FHI,

Geneva Global, and the Ministry of Education). PATH's technical assistance consists of strengthening the

capacity of partners to provide:

- Appropriate infant feeding, counseling, support, and follow-up for all HIV-exposed infants and mothers,

along with a package of child-survival and reproductive-health interventions with linkages to HIV prevention,

treatment, and pediatric care services.

- Nutritional assessment, counseling, and support as an integrated part of care, including routine

assessment of anthropometric status, nutrition-related symptoms, and diet, with therapeutic or

supplementary feeding support for malnourished clients.

- Linkages to food aid and social services that can assist in the assessment and support of household food

security.

- Training for social workers, community workers, and OVC caregivers.

- Wrap-around nutrition support provided as part of home-based palliative and OVC care.

With FY08 funding, PATH in collaboration with national programs and international and local partners is:

• Training 150 health workers from 50 PMTCT and HIV care sites supported by ICAP, ACONDA, and

EGPAF as well as two staff members from PNPEC, four from PNN, and one each from PNSI, PNOEV,

SASDE, INSP, PNSR, and ICAP in infant feeding, nutritional care, and HIV.

• Adapting, disseminating, and supporting the use of clinical support tools (algorithms) and IEC materials

(counseling cards and take-home brochures) at 50 sites.

• Strengthening or introducing systems at 50 PMTCT and HIV care sites to routinely follow up and support

nutritional care of infants (0-2 years) of HIV-positive women (including mechanisms to capture those lost to

follow-up).

• Providing technical support and supervision in nutrition and infant feeding to PMTCT and HIV care sites

through quarterly visits once training is completed.

• Elaborating a minimum package and standards for nutrition services for OVCs.

• Incorporating appropriate information from the infant feeding curriculum, depending on partners' needs,

into existing or planned partner trainings (of social workers, facility-based lay counselors, and/or community

agents).

• Adapting and introducing key community- and home-based support, counseling, and IEC materials for

OVCs (0-5 years), building on materials developed.

• Developing and supporting implementation of referral and counter-referral systems for food and nutritional

care for OVCs to PMTCT, ART, and palliative care services.

• Providing technical support for quality control in food and nutrition activities to OVC partners. This includes

community and home follow-up.

• Working as a member of IRIS and providing technical assistance on nutrition and quality control for

partners involved in IRIS.

• Providing ongoing technical assistance on food and nutrition to the PEPFAR team and national OVC

program, including assistance in determining entry and exit criteria for OVCs for WFP.

• Supporting the development and quarterly meetings of a national nutrition and HIV working group

("Groupe Technique") led by the Government of Côte d'Ivoire.

• Developing and disseminating key nutrition strategies, directives, and technical updates for nutrition and

infant feeding.

• Providing updates to national training courses and technical assistance for trainings as needed.

• Providing technical support and assisted in national consultations to revise the child health card (including

new growth standards).

• Providing technical support and assisting in national consultations to revise post-partum follow-up routines

and forms for infants and OVCs at PMTCT and OVC sites.

• Providing technical support for additional national dialogue and consultation on food and nutrition and HIV

(including the use of fortification foods, fortification of complementary foods, and promotion of exclusive

breast feeding).

Activity Narrative: • Developing new materials and supports (e.g. flip chart and take-home brochure) for feeding of infants 6-24

months (complementary feeding), including appropriate care, recipes, etc.

• Providing high-level advocacy, sensitization, and technical assistance to health professionals, training

institutions, and other donors as needed.

• Negotiating with GAIN to include Cote d'Ivoire as one of the target countries for IYCN/GAIN collaboration.

• Pending selection of Cote d'Ivoire as a target country, working to create and implement an appropriate

business plan for the collaboration, including identification of local private-sector partners and roles.

With FY09 funding, PATH will continue to provide technical assistance to PEPFAR-supported facility- and

community-based OVC care providers as well as to the PNN and WFP to develop and implement nutrition

activities. Technical assistance will strengthen, disseminate, and apply national policies on nutrition for

persons living with or affected by HIV/AIDS.

Building on FY08, PATH will use FY09 funding to apply lessons learned to strengthen and expand activities

with existing and new OVC partners. Activities will be expanded in additional OVC sites proposed by

PEPFAR partners in consultation with the PNOEV. In addition, new activities will be integrated to reach

target groups of other national, international, and PEPFAR partners. New activities will include:

•Integrating OVC-related HIV and Nutrition information and skills into the existing pre-service training

curricula for social workers (INFS and INJS)

The PNOEV has started to introduce the concept of OVC care in the national pre-service training curricula

of social workers through their training schools (INFS). In TY09, PATH will provide technical assistance to

the PNOEV, in collaboration with FHI, to integrate HIV and Nutrition in the national pre-service training

curricula of social workers (INFS, INJS).

•Strengthen the capacity of national OVC trainers to provide in-service training in Nutrition and HIV

Eighty national OVC trainers work in collaboration with the PNOEV through the integrated OVC coordination

platforms (16 existing platforms and 12 planned by the PNOEV for FY08) for social services throughout the

country. In collaboration with the PNOEV, PATH will integrate HIV and Nutrition in the in-service training

curriculum for social workers, which focuses on the minimum package of nutrition services for OVC, defined

collaboratively in FY08. PATH will then train 60 national trainers in HIV and Nutrition. Work to make the

training course and curriculum accessible for social workers began in collaboration with the PNOEV during

FY08. PATH will also work with the PNOEV to adapt these materials to the level of community counselors.

The 60 OVC trainers will then be responsible for integrating HIV and Nutrition issues into routine in-service

training workshops. They will also organize cascade workshops for social workers and community

counselors, as proposed by the PNOEV. The PNOEV will be responsible for cascade training workshops,

with PATH providing occasional TA, support, and supervision.

•Build upon and strengthen strategies of other OVC partners to spread sensitization messages to the target

population

PEPFAR OVC partners use various ways to spread messages to the community, such as community radio,

messages in local language, and discussion groups. PATH will work with these partners to introduce

appropriate messages on nutrition for OVC. The basic technical messages will build upon the minimum

package of nutrition for OVC developed in FY08.

•Provide basic equipment to social services sites

In collaboration with national programs (PNOEV, PNN) and international partners (UNICEF, WHO), PATH

will adapt the minimum standards of equipment (e.g. measuring ribbon, infant feeding cup, weight measure,

materials for diet demonstrations) for social services. This equipment is critical to ensure appropriate and

regular nutrition and growth assessments of infants and young children. PATH will assist in a facility

assessment in social centers, to be conducted in collaboration with the PNN and PNOEV. Based on the

results of this assessment, 28 social centers will be equipped by PATH.

•Conduct situational analysis to research food mapping by geographic zone and propose adapted recipes

for OVC 6-24 months

In FY08, food mapping in Abidjan was used to identify appropriate, locally available foods that could be

used to make complementary foods suitable for OVC aged 6-24 months. With FY09 funds, PATH in

collaboration with the PNN, PNOEV, and PNPEC will conduct a similar food-mapping exercise in other

zones (North, West, East, and Center) of the country. Results of this food mapping will allow PATH to

propose adapted recipes for complementary feeding by zone in order to take into account the available

foods and feeding habits of each zone. PATH will use linear programming tools to propose exact quantities

for each recipe.

• Initiate the creation and animation of HIV support groups at social centers, in collaboration with OVC

partners

Given the importance of psychosocial support and positive living for people infected or affected by HIV,

PATH will collaborate with the PNOEV, PNN, PNPEC, national networks (RIP+, COSCI), and PEPFAR

nutrition and OVC partners to initiate the creation of support groups with monthly discussion topics through

the OVC platforms at social-services sites. PATH will reproduce one copy of an animation guide for each

OVC partner, and will train them to use it. Each OVC partner will initiate the creation and animation of HIV

support groups at social centers using this guide. This guide will include specific information on how to

manage HIV-positive infants (e.g sensitization after receipt of HIV positive results, how to encourage

compliance with long-term ARV treatment and nutrition advice for infants and young children, etc), as well

as advice for adults.

PATH's emphasis on national guidelines and tools; on training for national, district, and community-level

Activity Narrative: actors, including health and social workers; on researching and using locally available and acceptable

foods; and on strengthening national and district-level technical groups and coordination bodies will all

contribute to sustainability of HIV and nutrition activities.

PATH will participate in PNOEV reviews of OVC activities. These reviews will provide an opportunity to

update and sensitize new OVC partners, as well as to reorient or provide refresher information to existing

partners, in order to strengthen their capacity in nutrition, in collaboration with other nutrition partners.

PATH will share its work plan with the PNN, PNOEV, and PNPEC in order to strengthen collaborative

relationships and to assist in providing coordinated assistance to health and social center sites.

PATH will use its M&E system to provide timely, accurate reports to national authorities and the USG

strategic information team. To help build a unified national M&E system, PATH will participate in quarterly SI

meetings and will implement decisions taken during these meetings.

New/Continuing Activity: Continuing Activity

Continuing Activity: 17121

Continued Associated Activity Information

Activity Activity ID USG Agency Prime Partner Mechanism Mechanism ID Mechanism Planned Funds

System ID System ID

17121 12219.08 U.S. Agency for Program for 7211 7211.08 Infant and $500,000

International Appropriate Young Child

Development Technology in Nutrition (IYCN)

Health

Project

12219 12219.07 U.S. Agency for Program for 7320 7320.07 PATH $600,000

International Appropriate

Development Technology in

Health

Emphasis Areas

Health-related Wraparound Programs

* Child Survival Activities

Human Capacity Development

Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Human Capacity Development $150,000

Public Health Evaluation

Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery

Estimated amount of funding that is planned for Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools $350,000

and Service Delivery

Food and Nutrition: Commodities

Economic Strengthening

Education

Water

Table 3.3.13:

Cross Cutting Budget Categories and Known Amounts Total: $1,000,000
Human Resources for Health $140,000
Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery $60,000
Human Resources for Health $150,000
Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery $150,000
Human Resources for Health $150,000
Food and Nutrition: Policy, Tools, and Service Delivery $350,000