Project profile — Support to Combat STIs and HIV/AIDS (PALIH) - Phase II



Overview 

CA-3-A032673001
$18,288,160
Consortium -CECI - Center for International Studies and Cooperation; and CCISC Center for International Cooperation in Health and Development (CA-CRA_ACR-3892605882)
2006-12-01 - 2013-05-31
Closed
Global Affairs Canada
NGM Americas

Country / region 

• Haiti (100.00%)

Sector 

• Health policy and administrative management:
Health policy and administrative management (12110) (10.00%)
Medical services (12191) (10.00%)
• Health education:
Health education (12261) (10.00%)
Health personnel development (12281) (10.00%)
• Reproductive health care:
Reproductive health care (13020) (10.00%)
STD control including HIV/AIDS (13040) (30.00%)
Personnel development for population and reproductive health (13081) (10.00%)
• Government And Civil Society, General: Human rights (15160) (10.00%)

Policy marker 

• Gender equality (significant objective)
• Participatory development and good governance (significant objective)
• Youth Issues (significant objective)

Description 

The PALIH 2 project addresses a major public health problem in Haiti, the high prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and HIV/AIDS. The project aims to reduce the spread of STIs and HIV/AIDS within the population living in Artibonite region, via: i) improved governance of health institutions, including decentralization and management of health information; ii) context specific services (i.e.: reception services, treatment, monitoring and availability of drugs) for groups at high risk of contracting STIs - sex trade workers, youth, women victims of violence; people living with HIV; and iii) general services for STI-HIV/AIDS.

Expected results 

N/A

Results achieved 

Results achieved as of the end of the project (January 2012) include: seven municipal health unit offices are operational and working to strengthen the availability of quality health services for approximately 1.5 million people. More than 330 people from the Health Ministry and from civil society improved their skills in health system management. The health information collection and epidemiologic surveillance system is now operational and more efficient. This was demonstrated at the onset of the cholera epidemic, when the system made it possible to sound the alarm quickly and monitor the progress of the epidemic in the Artibonite region. With the project’s support, 87% of health institutions now offer sexually transmitted infections prevention, testing and treatment services that respect Health Ministry norms (compared to an estimated 48% in 2006). While an estimated 623,700 people in Artibonite had access to these types of services in at the beginning of the project in 2006, at the beginning of the project inby 2012, more than 1,445,000 people have access to health centres that offer these services. With regard to prevention, testing and treatment of HIV/AIDS, 24 health institutions now offer adapted HIV/AIDS services for the most vulnerable population, including sex workers and their clients, young people, abused women, and people living with HIV. The project’s target populations are increasingly using these services, with more than 15,000 people having benefited from them to date. The studies carried out at the end of the project have shown positive results in terms of changing sexual behaviours within the project’s target populations. These results have contributed to improving how health services are provided and managed in in Artibonite, particularly for sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS.

Budget and spending 


Original budget $0
Planned disbursement $0
Transactions
Country percentages by sector
Type of finance Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation
Collaboration type Bilateral
Type of aid Donor country personnel
Date modified: