3 by 5 Initiative
In this collaborative context, WHO has devised a 5-pillar communication strategy:
- Develop global leadership, alliances, and advocacy - Involves advocacy for funding, training and strengthening country health services (click here for more information on the Integrated Management of Adolescent and Adult Illness (IMAI) health care/training strategy), as well as publishing (with UNAIDS) ethical guidelines promoting equity and human rights in the provision of ART.
- Provide urgent, sustained country support - Involves mobilisation of emergency response teams for high-burden countries; encouraging national political commitment for 3 by 5; working with national governments to strengthen health systems to respond to the crisis; training professional and lay staff; and strengthening physical resources like laboratories and testing equipment.
- Simplify standardised tools and assure quality - Involves establishing uniform standards and simplified tools to track ART, identifying multiple entry points for treatment (e.g., TB and reproductive health programmes, non-governmental organisations, or NGOs, faith-based organisations), as well as simplifying treatment regimes and guidelines for ART.
- Create an effective, reliable supply of medicines and diagnostics - Involves establishing a service to assist countries to secure uninterrupted access to appropriately priced, quality, antiretrovirals (ARVs), and diagnostics - as well as the development and distribution of technical tools and operational support. In addition, information is disseminated on legal and regulatory issues, prices, and sources.
- Rapidly identify and reapply new knowledge and successes - Involves establishing global communication systems to share progress and experience, developing and carrying out an operational research agenda, and building a situation room to track progress towards 3 by 5 milestones. The latter element involves the establishment of systems at country, regional and global levels to monitor process indicators such as number of countries with emergency plans, people trained, new treatment sites opened, and size of financing gaps.
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