Interview with Eric Goosby

From Science Speaks, an excellent blog from the staff of the Infectious Diseases Center for Global Health Policy, comes an interview with Dr. Eric Goosby, the U.S. Global AIDS ambassador.

Q: Roxana Rogers, USAID’s South Africa health team leader, said recently in South Africa that, “US government funding is going to come down dramatically over the next five years.” True?

A: No, it’s not true. Every year there’s been an overall increase in funding for PEPFAR, and we’ve also not been in a situation where we’ve had a decrease in any country, certainly not in South Africa. Our funding for South Africa is over a half billion dollars a year. Our resources that go into South Africa are having a huge impact, and I’m not understanding that (comment by Rogers).

We also committed to $120 million recently over two years to specifically address an unexpected shortage of funding for antiretroviral drugs in South Africa in nine provinces. The South African government asked us to be silent (about it during that time.) … It made a lot of sense for us to fund it for the simple reason that we not allow services to be interrupted and allow South Africa to respond to the increase in demand.

Roxana’s statement is based on the fact – I think – that she was used to PEPFAR funding that went up in huge increments every year — so much so they scrambled to find meaningful applications to use the funding for programs. Now we are in an economic crisis, with nowhere near the increase in funding like that, so on a relative level it may feel like a drop in funding.

Q: What happened in South Africa’s shortfall of funding for treatment?

A: PEPFAR has not run out of any antiretroviral drugs in any country, including South Africa. .. But for multiple times we’ve been asked to bail out a country for one or two months (because of drug shortages in the national program or funding shortages). South Africa had run out of resources to pay for the medication in nine provinces, starting in November. It was a significant outlay of resources for us and a real example of cooperation. In addition, we were able to work with the government to ensure their Treasury picks up the bill thereafter, so it doesn’t happen again.

Be sure to read the entire interview.

About The Author

Julio Bracero

Julio Bracero, MD, is a pediatrics resident at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, in Ponce, Puerto Rico, and is currently the editor-in-chief of Global Pulse.

Other posts byJulio Bracero

Author his web sitehttp://www.globalpulsejournal.com

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02 2010

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