Report on governance of the TB response in 22 countries
The Stop TB Partnership and USAID launch a new report assessing the governance of National TB Programmes in 22 countries which together account for over 70% of the global TB burden.
1 June 2021, Geneva, Switzerland - The Stop TB Partnership and
the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
today launched a new report – the first of its kind
– that assesses the governance of National Tuberculosis
Programmes (NTPs) in 22 countries which together account for
over 70% of the global TB burden. The report “Governance
of TB Programmes: An assessment of practices in 22
countries” is envisioned to support and strengthen the
performance of national-level action against tuberculosis (TB),
a preventable and curable disease, which needlessly kills 4,000
people every day.
Good governance is a critical
aspect of an effective NTP to ensure more effective and
efficient implementation of NTPs, and appropriate legal and
policy frameworks. It also allows for more transparency and
inclusiveness. While recent years have seen investment in the
technical capacity of NTPs and stakeholders, strengthened
governance has not been sufficiently prioritized or measured.
The 2021 report will serve as a baseline against which future
progress can be measured. It assesses the country programmes'
performance in four thematic areas: transparency, inclusiveness,
legal framework, and processes efficiency and effectiveness.
“This
report analyses, in detail, areas of national TB responses that
are often overlooked and not regularly discussed and
strengthened. However, as much as these areas are neglected, it
is essential that we assess, strengthen, and invest in legal
frameworks, transparency, ensure availability of data and
information, inclusiveness, and efficiencies of processes if we
want to end this disease,” said Lucica Ditiu, Executive
Director of the Stop TB Partnership. “Addressing the
findings of this report and supporting the NTPs and their teams
to attain the highest standards in their work will ensure that
the TB response is mature and indeed adequate to end TB by
2030.”
“Governance structure and approaches are key to
influencing the performance of the TB programmes. This report
will, therefore, not only show us where we are in regards to the
matter of governance of the NTPs but also enlighten us on areas
where national TB programmes ought to improve,” said Lungu
Saili Patrick, National TB Programme Manager, Zambia. “I
am hopeful that TB programmes and partners will embrace the
report and that we will use it positively to improve on the
benchmarks that are highlighted.”
Anna
Marie Celina G. Garfin, National TB Programme Manager from the
Philippines stated that “this report is important for us
to identify what the Philippines has done well, where there is
room for improvement, and to share best practices across the
board in our efforts to end TB.”
“Equity,
inclusion, and participation are critical for good governance.
Civil society and TB-affected communities must be at the center
of the effort to end TB,” said Rhoda Lewa, a TB-affected
community representative from Kenya.
The TB governance report is an important component of the USAID
Global Accelerator to End TB, which is designed to increase
public and private investments and build local commitment and
capacity to achieve the targets and commitments agreed on at the
2018 United Nations High-Level Meeting on TB by the 2022
deadline.
The report is based on responses received
from NTPs using a semi-structured questionnaire, as well as
through desk review of available data and documents from already
existing and credible sources.
Click to access the full report
A few excerpts of key findings based on the four thematic areas from the report:
-
Transparency – Three (14%) countries achieved the
benchmark for a working NTP website, owned by NTP, with latest
relevant information. Only one (5%) country achieved the
benchmark for availability of the latest case notification
data, five (23%) for availability of the latest TB guidelines
and none (0%) achieved the benchmark for availability of the
current National Strategic Plan (NSP) with annual budget on
the website. Eight (36%) countries achieved the benchmark for
conducting joint external programme reviews and making reports
available.
-
Inclusiveness – While 14 (64%) countries achieved the
benchmark for including TB civil society/TB survivors, and an
equal number of countries achieved the benchmark for having a
platform to collect feedback from the TB community and
subnational entities, none (0%) achieved all indicators
considered for benchmarking for inclusion of key populations
(KPs) in their NSP and none achieved all indicators considered
for benchmarking for gender inclusiveness in various NTP
activities. Only one (5%) achieved the benchmark for having a
mechanism and practice for the social contracting of NGOs and
private sector using government funds.
-
Legal Framework – 13 (59%) countries achieved the
benchmark for mandatory TB notification and 11 (50%) for
having medicines for drug-resistant TB in the national
essential medicines list and available for free to the people
who need it. However, the performance under other benchmarks
of this theme was not good, with only three (14%) having
achieved the benchmark for inclusion of human rights issues in
TB training modules or guidance documents, two (9%) for
featuring and measuring TB stigma in the NSP and one (5%) for
availability of social protection schemes and social health
insurance for all people with TB.
- Process efficiency and effectiveness – Four (18%) countries achieved the benchmark for the ability to rapidly adopt/adapt international guidelines as national policies and seven (32%) achieved the benchmark for approval efficiency, as assessed for the last training undertaken in the country. None (0%) of the countries achieved the other three benchmarks under this theme, such as those on NTP capacity to absorb funds from different sources, NTP manager empowerment, and NTP capacity (number of staff in relation to population/burden/provinces).
Source:
Stop TB Partnership