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Secretary Clinton has said, "The problems we face today will not be solved by governments alone. It will be in partnerships - partnerships with philanthropy, with global business, partnerships with civil society." As PEPFAR shifts to promotion of country-led sustainable responses, it is essential to employ all possible mechanisms to build systems and expand capacity.
Public-Private Partnerships
Public-private partnerships (PPPs) are a tool that can enhance PEPFAR and country government approaches to HIV/AIDS and strengthening of overall health systems. PEPFAR has worked with public-private engagement mechanisms throughout the government, including the Department of State's Global Partnerships Initiative. Over the past three years, PEPFAR has made significant strides in brokering PPPs and establishing relationships with key private sector entities.
Private sector partners have skills that complement PEPFAR's technical focus, including marketing and distribution networks. Many of PEPFAR's private sector partners have specific technical expertise in areas such as laboratory capacity and information technology. PEPFAR has worked to link their capabilities with areas of program emphasis to leverage not just dollars, but results that can be sustained in the long term.
Over the next phase of PEPFAR, the program is developing partnerships that will deliver impact with low transaction costs. There will be an emphasis on partnerships supporting prevention, broad health systems strengthening, and human resources for health. PEPFAR's PPP projects will explicitly integrate gender strategies as a cross-cutting element wherever feasible. The following are ways that PPPs can support the vision for the next phase of PEPFAR:
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