Bobby Ramakant: TB Partnerships
TB Partnerships: Whole Is Greater Than The
Sum Of Its Parts
A report released online earlier this week states that effective partnerships can improve tuberculosis responses globally. The summary report, titled, "Whole Is Greater Than The Sum Of Its Parts", was also distributed at the 42nd Union World Conference on Lung Health in Lille, France (online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/2011/10/tb-partnerships-whole-is-greater-thanhtml). This report is the summary of the online consultation that was facilitated by CNS: www.citizen-news.org – a partner of the Stop TB Partnership - using social media platforms and also the Stop-TB eForum that was established by the Health and Development Networks (HDN) in early 2001, and currently is supported by the Stop TB Partnership, the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union) and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance, and managed by CNS. The online consultation was held during October 2011.
The guiding question was: What are the different types of groups, people, organizations or entities you have partnered with to fill a gap in TB prevention, care and/or control?
OVER HUNDRED COMMENTARIES FROM 24 COUNTRIES came in through a diverse range of channels including the global Stop-TB eForum, blog, twitter, Facebook, and comments sent by email.
The participants of the online consultation came from the following countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico, Myanmar, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, United States of America, Viet Nam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
ACSM Strategies
A strong element
of some partnerships has been the advocacy, communication
and social mobilization (ACSM) strategies. For example in
Mexico, the national TB programme (NTP) provided its
technical expertise and infrastructure and PCI through its
SOLUCION TB Programme provided the knowhow of working with
affected and vulnerable communities.
Person-Centre Model Fostering Community
Empowerment
An important innovation of a partnership
consisted of the appropriation of a person-centered model of
service delivery and mechanisms that foster community
empowerment and work to reduce stigma and discrimination.
The partnership addressed healthcare needs for TB, HIV/AIDS
and diabetes.
Engaging
Most-At-Risk-Populations
Engaging
most-at-risk-populations (MARP) as equal partners with
dignity is crucial to make programmes work optimally. These
MARPs include: Injecting drug users (IDU), poor people,
people living with HIV (PLHIV) among others.
Informal Partnerships Worked
A participant
from Nigeria said: “The structured partnership mechanism
set up by Stop TB Partnership (Nigeria Stop TB Partnership
has not worked due to so many reasons including interim
National Committee's inability to function. However, at
informal level partnership for TB control and care has
worked and is an effective tool for TB control and care.
Through our organisation advocacy efforts, we have been able
to form informal partnership with community leaders and
community members, thus involving and selecting community
volunteers for TB case finding. Also informal partnership
with primary health centres in the community has helped to
educate TB patients on drug adherence and other
issues.”
Improving Country-Level Partnerships
And Alignment
Open, simple and practical
communication solutions are also a key in making
partnerships work at all levels.
Real
Collaboration And Coordination
Partnerships require
real collaboration and coordination, not just meetings.
Many participants described weaknesses not so much in the
model itself, but in how it is being implemented. The issue
of community voices being present in various partnerships
– but not necessarily heard – was raised repeatedly.
They need to be involved at all levels – planning,
budgeting, implementation, and monitoring and evaluation
phases.
Partnerships Should Ensure Louder Voices
Don’t Dominate
Country-level partnerships should
make sure that louder voices don't dominate- and - they are
truly driven by the communities even if governments, big
NGOs and donors are a part of it.
Common Agenda
Not Confined By Organisational Mandates
Partnerships
work only when members agree on a common agenda rising above
and beyond their organisational agendas at times. If we
limit ourselves to our organisational mandates only, then
partnerships are likely to suffer.
Need To Engage
Non-Traditional Stakeholders
Participants also
highlighted the need to engage non-traditional stakeholders
such as other Ministries in addition to Ministries of Health
and other non-governmental organisations other than those
working on TB directly (for example those working on
diabetes, HIV, poverty, nutrition among other issues).
Trust In Competence Of Civil Society
A
participant said: “We also have to stop thinking that
civil society cannot do the work properly.” People who are
dealing with TB are also equal partners in finding solutions
that work. In order to optimise the reach and impact of TB
programmes, affected communities need to be involved
meaningfully at all levels. Their expertise in ‘reaching
the unreached’ among others must be recognized and duly
respected. Another participant said: “Real action if any
has, and will, come at local level. That is where a
partnership can make a real difference.” Another
participant said: "One way to make sure that the
partnerships are community driven is to ensure that these
are not run by governments - and – civil society gets
direct funding or support. We need to trust the competence
of civil society - and - its ability to learn, organize and
innovate when given a chance. Give it a chance."
Partnership Funding – A Double Edged
Sword
Managing partnership funding – both a
challenge and an opportunity. Said a participant: “Even
without money, voluntary partnerships of civil society or
diverse stakeholders are never easy to manage. With money
things can become more difficult if we are not careful. It
is a double edge sword.”
Improved Monitoring
And Evaluation
Participants highlighted the need for
improved and collectively developed monitoring and
evaluation systems so that medium and long-term objectives,
indicators and targets align with national systems.
Participation And Representation
A participant
said: “All partners must realize (especially those more in
power) that by increasing participation and representation
they will strengthen the partnership as a whole and achieve
much more than they will ever individually or in smaller
groups.” Representation by different members should be
consultative with the constituencies they respectively
represent.
Improving Coordination And
Inclusion
The partnership needs to be coordinated
well and in such a way so as to stimulate more inclusion of
partners in strategies, decision making and other areas such
as advocacy planning at all levels. A participant said:
“Smaller partners are not there just to implement what the
big partners decide.”
Transparency
A
participant said: “Transparency within the partnership is
very important indeed especially when it comes to financial
matters.”
Governance And Management
Systems
There are certain key issues which affect the
governance and management systems to facilitate a
partnership, such as conflict of interest, tokenistic
participation in programme planning, incompetent monitoring
systems, and unrealistic capacity building systems.
Local Partnerships
Many participants advocated
for paying more attention in strengthening local level
partnerships. A strong and active TB partnership on the
frontline can effectively feed into and impart strength to
state- or national- level partnerships. This will also
address genuine representation of affected communities in TB
responses at local, state or national level and will also
improve their participation in discourses related to TB
responses.
No Self-Sustainability Plan For
Partnerships
A participant said: “Partnerships can
be a means of mobilising resources for the partners. However
in most cases the resource mobilisation is from external
sources and there is no self-sustainability plan available.
When money dries, the partnership withers.”
Striking A Balance
A participant said: “It
is also important for partnerships to strike a balance
between alignment with national policies and strategies, and
keeping an independent voice that helps feed into
strengthening these policies through a watchdog
approach.”
Safe Space For Civil Society
Doesn’t Exist In Every Country
A participant said:
“Governments should give an equal opportunity for civil
society to get engaged in TB responses. In many countries,
it is difficult to believe that governments will not
'control' such partnerships thereby negating all the good we
want to achieve by civil society engagement.”
One Partnership, One Agenda, United
Response
“Without a unifying and common or shared
agenda such discussions of working in partnerships and then
partners working amongst each other will go in circles. The
donors should invest money in shaping such a platform where
members can agree on an agenda reflecting needs of
communities, mobilize resources and implement effectively”
said a participant. Another participant added:
“Partnerships exist - but to strengthen them will require
a platform where all members can participate as equals - not
a partnership where some are more equal than others. That is
why coordinated response is a challenge - especially when
dominating government agencies and their handpicked or
favourite NGOs rule the show.”
Teaching By
Practice
Partners should establish standard workplace
policies related to HIV, TB, sexual and reproductive health,
gender and other issues within their organisation before
asking the entire Partnership to take a stand. This will not
only reduce staff vulnerability but also build an enabling
workplace environment.
Mutual Trust And
Respect
A participant said: “Good partnership only
can exist, if mutual trust and respect can be realized. If
not, competition, jealousy even animosity, may be
inevitable.” To make a partnership successful, there must
be respect for individuals and agencies it works with,
whether they are the person directly impacted by TB or the
staff of a TB organization. Another participant said:
“Building a solid relationship based on trust,
understanding, sincerity, and flexibility has enabled us to
create a family feeling for the individuals and
organizations we have partnered with over the years. We have
worked with local health jurisdictions, private and public
TB organizations, universities, government agencies,
advocacy/education organizations, media outlets, individual
donors, churches, and community businesses.”
Gender
A participant said: “These
partnerships on TB must ensure they have well representation
of different genders. Preferably they should be led by other
genders than a man. It is important to recognize and let
other genders take leadership and be given such
opportunities - and supported by the entire partnership when
they convene. For example, in western UP [a state in India]
which is a very patriarchal society, unless women are
engaged in leadership roles, how else will TB programmes
become gender sensitive to their needs, challenges and what
works and what doesn't work with them? So is true for others
in more severity like transgender populations - these are
important voices and communities know best - and only these
voices can help programmes reach the unreached.
Right In Health But No Right In Governance?
A
participant said: “What about nations where civil society
generally is struggling for basic human rights but is
expected to run democratic, ideal, equitable and just
partnerships on TB? Is it because of the funding? That is
why our responses on TB must accommodate programmes
addressing social determinants of health and social
justice.”
National Partnerships Maximise
Efforts Of Existing State And Non-State Actors
A
participant said: “The partnering process allows national
partnerships to maximize the efforts of existing state and
non-state actors; bring more services and awareness-raising
campaigns to the people, where they are; give a unified
voice to non-state partners; and serve as a platform to
develop funding proposals and implement grants.”
Principles Of Equity
A participant said:
“People who are doing the service provision on the
frontlines are least remunerated - and those sitting on top
of TB responses either at the state, country or global
level, are heavily remunerated - compare the remuneration
please. This inequity has to stop in the development sector
and let us have some balance to strengthen country responses
to TB.”
Unity
A participant shared:
“…the Partnership provides a voice of a unified civil
society in engaging with the government in TB care and
control through efforts like providing recommendations into
the program planning of national TB programme”
Partnerships Build Trust Between Multiple
Sectors
A participant said: “… the partnership is
building trust and collaboration between multiple sectors
involved in TB care and control initiatives, through
national and regional consultations, with equal
participation from all sectors to brainstorm on
collaborative efforts and have various channels for
communication and sharing of experiences among
partners.”
Defining Roles And Responsibilities
Within A Partnership
A participant shared: “Some of
the challenges faced during the formation and functioning of
the Partnership include interacting with the different
mindset of a variety of partners from diverse sectors
,defining roles and responsibilities of the partnership
acceptable to all stakeholders; and defining a governance
system maintaining equal representation.” (CNS)
Bobby Ramakant –
CNS
(The author serves as the
Director (Policy and Programmes), CNS: www.citizen-news.org and is a World
Health Organization (WHO) Director-General’s WNTD Awardee
2008. Email: bobby@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)
- Shared under Creative Commons (CC) Attribution License
ENDS