at what cost? u.s. leadership in global health in an era of austerity

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At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity Dr. J. Stephen Morrison Senior Vice President; Director, Global Health Policy Center Center for Strategic and International Studies

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At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity. Dr. J. Stephen Morrison Senior Vice President; Director, Global Health Policy Center Center for Strategic and International Studies. US Bilateral Global Health Financing: 1990-2011. Source: IHME DAH Database 2011 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of AusterityDr. J. Stephen MorrisonSenior Vice President;Director, Global Health Policy CenterCenter for Strategic and International Studies

Page 2: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

www.csis.org | 2

US Bilateral Global Health Financing: 1990-2011

1990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011 -

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000

8,000

Billi

ons

of 2

009

US D

olla

rs

Source: IHME DAH Database 2011Note: 2010 and 2011 are preliminary estimates based on information from the above organizations, including budgets, appropriations, and correspondence

Page 3: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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Global Health Financing By Source: 1990-2011

Page 4: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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HIV/AIDS40.2%

Basic Health & Medical

Care14.8%

Management/ Workforce,

13.2%

FP/RH11.0%

Malaria8.7%

Other In-fectious Diseases

5.8%

TB4.3%

Nutrition2.0% HIV/AIDS; 19.1%

Basic Health & Medical

Care; 19.3%

Management/Workforce;

26.4%

FP/RH; 19.4%

Malaria; 0.6%

Other Infec-tious Dis-

eases; 12.5%

TB; 0.3%

Nutrition; 2.4%

Total = $4.4 billion (USD) Total = $18.4 billion (USD)

SOURCE: Kaiser Family FoundationNote: Amounts in gross US$ disbursements. Health ODA combines data from three OECD CRS sub-sectors: (1) Health; (2) Population Policies/Programs and Reproductive Health (includes HIV/AIDS & STDs); and (3) Other Social Infrastructure and Services - Social Mitigation of HIV/AIDS Source: Analysis of data obtained via online query of the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Database and Creditor Reporting System (CRS), November 7, 2012.

Donor Health Investments 2002 vs 2010 2002 2010

Page 5: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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Changing Global Burden of Disease:Changes in Cause of Death, 1990-2010

SOURCE: The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2010, online

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CHART BY: Kaiser Family FoundationSOURCE: UNAIDS, Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic, 2012.

Millions

Global Estimates of People Living with HIV/AIDS 1990-2011

Page 7: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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HIV/AIDS Pandemic Overview (2011)HIV/AIDS remains a serious global threat:• 2.5 million new HIV infections worldwide• 1.7 million AIDS-related deathsProgress is being made:• 8 million people (54 percent of eligible people) worldwide received

treatment with effective antiretroviral drugs• Between 2001 and 2011, the rate of new HIV infections has been reduced

by more than 50 percent among adults (15 to 49 years) in 25 countries• The number of people dying from AIDS-related causes in sub-Saharan

Africa declined by 32 percent, from 1.8 million to 1.2 million, between 2005 and 2011

Major challenges remain:• 6.8 million people remain eligible and waiting for treatment• Only 30% of treatment-eligible pregnant women living with HIV were

receiving ART.

Source: UNAIDS, “UNAIDS World AIDS Day Report 2012,” December 2012, online

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Global Deaths from HIV/AIDS: Regional Distribution (2011)

Source: UNAIDS, online

Page 9: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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Global Malaria Deaths: 2001-2010

Page 10: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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Reported Global Polio Cases: 2001-2012

Source: WHO AFP/Polio Database; communications with WHO

Page 11: At What Cost? U.S. Leadership in Global Health in an Era of Austerity

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US Priorities During the Second Obama Term

• Sustainability: partner country ownership & orderly transitions

• Ensure continuous high-level US leadership • Preserve broad American consensus • Consolidate reforms in face of recession• Clarify priorities and who is in charge

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Global Health Diplomacy

1. Preserve centrality of the Secretary of State2. Better engage G-8 and emerging powers 3. Empower U.S. ambassadors

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HIV/AIDS

1. Maintain funding2. Link U.S. programs with Global Fund 3. Implement AIDS-Free Generation4. Manage transition challenges

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Malaria

1. Expand use of rapid diagnostics 2. Explore innovative finance 3. Focus upon rising resistance4. Continue research investment 5. Control substandard products.

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Polio

1. Concentrate upon achieving eradication 2. Combine CDC and USAID contributions3. Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nigeria: how reconcile

global security versus global health?

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Women’s Global Health

1. Translate U.S. policies into action2. Monitor progress in addressing inequality3. Advance partnerships on cervical cancer,

violence, safe motherhood

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Multilateral Partners

• Possess valuable assets• Of rising significance to U.S.

interests• Face funding replenishments and

continued pressures to reform

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Global Health Security

1. Diminished perceived threat 2. International Health Regulations: laboratories,

surveillance, reporting, training. 3. Integration of public health with biosecurity

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Thank You!

Please register at www.SmartGlobalHealth.org to receive the CSIS volume Global Health Policy in the Second Obama Term, which will be available in late February.