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Study raises questions about measurement of 'additionality,' or maintaining domestic health spending amid foreign donations

机译:研究提出了有关“额外性”的衡量标准,或在外国捐款中维持国内卫生支出的问题

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摘要

Donor nations and philanthropic organizations increasingly require that funds provided for a specific health priority such as HIV should supplement domestic spending on that priority-a concept known as "additionality." We investigated the "additionality" concept using data from Honduras, Rwanda, and Thailand, and we found that the three countries increased funding for HIV in response to increased donor funding. In contrast, the study revealed that donors, faced with increased Global Fund resources for HIV in certain countries, tended to decrease their funding for HIV or shift funds for use in non-HIV health areas. More broadly, we found many problems in the measurement and interpretation of additionality. These findings suggest that it would be preferable for donors and countries to agree on how best to use available domestic and external funds to improve population health, and to develop better means of tracking outcomes, than to try to develop more sophisticated methods to track additionality.
机译:捐助国和慈善组织日益要求为艾滋病等特定的健康优先事项提供的资金应补充该优先事项上的国内支出,这一概念被称为“附加性”。我们使用来自洪都拉斯,卢旺达和泰国的数据研究了“附加性”概念,我们发现这三个国家为增加捐助者的资金而增加了对艾滋病毒的资金。相反,研究表明,面对某些国家增加的全球基金用于艾滋病毒的资金,捐助者倾向于减少其对艾滋病毒的资金或将资金用于非艾滋病毒健康领域。更广泛地说,我们在衡量和解释附加性时发现了许多问题。这些发现表明,与尝试开发更复杂的方法来追踪额外性相比,捐助者和国家最好就如何最好地利用可用的国内外资金来改善人口健康并开发更好的追踪结果的方法达成共识。

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