Global health funding faces a shortfall of billions to fight diseases
The ecstatic press releases started even before the conference to replenish the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria officially closed last month in Montreal. The fund, which channels donor money to local programs that fight the three diseases in places where they are the most damaging, especially sub-Saharan Africa, had put out a call for $13 billion for its next three years of programming. By the end of the conference, the fund had raised $12.9 billion.
The bulletins out of Quebec captured the relief of a public
health community that has watched its international financing
dwindle, even as scientific advances make it increasingly
possible to actually end some of the world’s worst
diseases. That includes HIV, officially the deadliest epidemic
in history, according to the United Nations. The decline in
global health funding threatens not just to stymie scientific
advances against diseases like HIV, but to actually reverse
gains made in the past decade.
That’s why the
celebration following the Global Fund’s replenishment was
premature, according to health activists. Without bigger, more
sustained and more diversified commitments, hundreds of
thousands of people will continue to die from diseases that are
easily prevented and treated. The situation calls into question
the international community’s ability to meet public
health threats, even as new dangers continue to emerge.
The United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals released last year include a long list of targets designed to drive the global agenda on everything from poverty reduction to climate action over the next 15 years. The list includes a call to “end the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and neglected tropical diseases” by 2030.
The deadline is probably unrealistic, but the end result is no fantasy. There are strategies to end AIDS by 2030 and to cut tuberculosis deaths by 95 percent from 2015 to 2035. In his final State of the Union address in January, President Barack Obama underscored the feasibility of ending malaria, too.
Ultimately, decades of research have delivered the interventions
necessary to prevent people from falling sick from these three
diseases, and many more. When people do get sick, medications
exist to treat most patients, or, in the case of HIV—which
remains incurable—to deliver them near normal life
expectancy.
The humanitarian justification for these
efforts is obvious. Ending the HIV, malaria and tuberculosis
epidemics would have saved
nearly 2.5 million lives in 2014, most of them in the developing world, according to the
World Health Organization.
There are other interests at play, though, not least of which
are economic. In addition to saving the global donors billions
of dollars in aid, ending these epidemics could help spur
economic growth in the countries that have been most affected by
them, especially in eastern and southern Africa. Conversely, not
ending them has the potential to cost significantly more lives
and to collapse national health systems.
While they
have not reached everyone who needed them, the steady stream of
new drugs and improved interventions has saved hundreds of
thousands of lives in the developing world, especially of
newborns and infants. The result is that there is currently the
largest population of young people on the planet
in human history, according to the United Nations. But many are
living in places where public health services for young people
are limited. As they start to become sexually active, that puts
them at increased risk of contracting HIV. Once infected and
without proper treatment, they are then more susceptible to
tuberculosis and other diseases.
The sheer number of people who could fall sick has the potential
to overwhelm any response the international community could
muster. Global health experts warn that the number of people who
could become infected with HIV, alone, could outstrip the totals
seen at the height of the global epidemic in the 1990s and early
2000s, when there were the most AIDS-related deaths globally.
All
of which has global health advocates asking why there is not
more urgency in the push for financial resources. Instead,
international donor funding for the global HIV response actually
fell more than $1 billion between 2014 and 2015, according to a recent analysis by the Kaiser Family
Foundation and UNAIDS.
The Global Fund’s
replenishment is unlikely to offset those losses. In fact,
Stephen Lewis, the former U.N. special envoy for HIV/AIDS in
Africa, organized a side event in Montreal to warn that the fund
had set its request far too low in order to not to scare away
skittish donors—$20 billion too low, according to his calculations. “The shortfall in
funding is astronomic,” he said. “Additional
billions are needed, a minimum of $3 billion in this coming year
alone.”
In the face of the funding shortfall,
the international community has called on the governments most
affected by these epidemics to invest more in alleviating them.
Officials in places like South Africa, Kenya and Botswana have
shown a willingness to contribute more domestic resources.
Meanwhile, international donors have been considering strategies
to improve the efficiency of their programs and direct the
funding they do have to the communities where it is likely to
have the most impact.
But these efforts are still
likely to fall short of the ambitious targets. As Lewis
cautioned, “You’ll never put an end to AIDS,
tuberculosis and malaria unless the major donors pull their
weight.”
The funding shortfall has broader
ramifications. If the international community cannot find the
resources to eradicate the diseases it has the tools to, what
chance does it have against those it does not? It is a critical
question in the era of Ebola, Zika and, perhaps most
importantly, anti-microbial resistance. Anti-microbial
resistance is what happens when micro-organisms—everything
from bacteria to parasites—become resistant to the
medications that currently exist to treat them. Outgoing U.N.
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has called it “a
fundamental, long-term threat to human health.”
Anti-microbial
resistance is happening more and more often, becoming enough of
a worry that the U.N. held a high-level meeting to discuss what
to do about it at last month’s General Assembly. The
meeting ended with a declaration from the heads of state that
included a commitment to
“mobilize adequate, predictable and sustained
funding”—just what they are already struggling to do.
Source:
World Politics Review