Projects

Southern Africa Human Capacity Development Coalition

Countries in Southern Africa have some of the highest HIV/AIDS infection rates in the world, but human resources to address the epidemic are often limited in numbers, training, and logical distribution. The Southern Africa Human Capacity Development (SA-HCD) Coalition worked to improve the delivery of HIV/AIDS services by strengthening the capacity of health workers, policy-makers and planners, program managers, educational faculties and institutions, communities, and families. The Coalition worked in Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, Malawi, and Swaziland.

To foster a strong, coordinated response to HIV/AIDS among Southern African organizations, the Coalition provided technical assistance and evaluated and shared promising practices and successful models for strengthening human resources for health. Technical assistance by the local and regional African organizations within the Coalition addressed the human capacity crisis by improving workforce planning and use, enhancing health worker skills, and strengthening systems to support health worker performance. The program marketed coalition organizations to governments and HIV/AIDS initiatives, encouraging the participation of African regional networks and institutions in combating the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Selected Initiatives

  • Establishing country-level human capacity development alliances for strategy development and leadership; these alliances will act as a bridge between the SA-HCD Coalition and subcoalitions, helping to ensure country-level buy-in and ownership of human capacity development strengthening initiatives and outcomes
  • Gathering information and analyzing the country's human resources situation, including gaps in health services and projection of future needs where possible
  • Developing related strategies and plans for advocacy, information-sharing, knowledge management, communications, capacity-building of national organizations, and monitoring and evaluation
  • Expanding participation to stakeholders such as district health managers and other local government authorities, representatives of community-based organizations, and key health education and service site facilities
  • Monitoring progress, assessing results, and sharing successful models and lessons learned.