Global Fund's grants show substantial impact.WITH NEARLY 400 GRANTS APPROVED, the programmes financed by The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria malaria, infectious parasitic disease that can be either acute or chronic and is frequently recurrent. Malaria is common in Africa, Central and South America, the Mediterranean countries, Asia, and many of the Pacific islands. are proving that treatment and prevention efforts are working where money is invested. The Global Fund works to increase resources to fight these diseases, in close cooperation with other multilateral and bilateral organizations to ensure that newly funded programmes are coordinated with existing ones. As of April 2006, newly-compiled performance results show that 544,000 people have begun antiretroviral antiretroviral /an·ti·ret·ro·vi·ral/ (-ret´ro-vi?ral) effective against retroviruses, or an agent with this quality. an·ti·ret·ro·vi·ral adj. (ARV ARV abbr. Bible American Revised Version ARV n abbr (= American Revised Version) → traducción americana de la Biblia ARV n abbr (= ) treatment through these programmes, up from 384,000 six months ago and more than a fourfold fourfold Adjective 1. having four times as many or as much 2. composed of four parts Adverb by four times as many or as much Adj. 1. increase since December 2004. Together with programmes providing directly observed short-course treatment strategy (DOTS), more than 1.4 million cases of tuberculosis have been detected and treated worldwide. In addition, Global Fund-supported programmes to combat malaria expanded the distribution of insecticide-treated bed nets to 11.3 million, up from 7.7 million in December 2005. "This latest set of performance figures comes as very good news", particularly when the United Nations was meeting, from 31 May to 2 June, to discuss progress in the fight against AIDS over the past five years, said Richard Feachem Sir Richard George Andrew Feachem, KBE, FREng was born in Manchester, UK in 1947. He took up his position as the first Executive Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and Under Secretary-General of the United Nations, in July 2002. , Executive Director of the Global Fund. "These results demonstrate that where countries are given the resources they need, progress against this pandemic pandemic /pan·dem·ic/ (pan-dem´ik) 1. a widespread epidemic of a disease. 2. widely epidemic. pan·dem·ic adj. Epidemic over a wide geographic area. n. is possible. It shows that with sufficient global resources, we can drive back this scourge." Global Fund support for efforts to combat AIDS accounts for 56 per cent of the $5.4 million committed to date for programmes to fight the three diseases in 131 countries. Of the $3 billion allocated for AIDS, half is for prevention activities and the other half for treatment. In 2005, the Global Fund was responsible for an estimated 20 per cent of all international funding to support efforts to combat HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome and approximately two thirds for programmes against tuberculosis (TB) and malaria. Over the past three years, Global Fund financing has enabled nearly 53 countries to change from drugs that have become increasingly ineffective to treat malaria to the new artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT), which has the potential to drastically reduce mortality from the disease among children and pregnant mothers. In some countries, Global Fund grants have also provided blanket coverage of new long-lasting, insecticide-treated bed nets, which afford more durable, effective protection. The rollout of ACT or other effective combination therapies and bed nets, combined with targeted insecticide insecticide Any of a large group of substances used to kill insects. Such substances are mainly used to control pests that infest cultivated plants and crops or to eliminate disease-carrying insects in specific areas. spraying and strengthening of expertise, infrastructure and training, is expected to reduce malaria mortality in large parts of Africa in the coming years. On average, data compiled shows that grants to combat AIDS, TB and malaria are exceeding targets set out in their respective grant agreements, which serve as the basis of the Global Fund's grant evaluation. The results, released on 31 May 2006, represent the aggregation of numbers issued directly from reports on individual grants' progress. While these figures demonstrate the Fund's expanding track record in saving lives, raising awareness Raising awareness is a common phrase advocacy groups use to justify a particular event, brochure or even the entire organization. Raising awareness refers to alerting the general public that a certain issue exists and should be approached the way the group desires. among vulnerable populations and preventing further infections, its funding gap for 2006 and 2007 threatens to curtail cur·tail tr.v. cur·tailed, cur·tail·ing, cur·tails To cut short or reduce. See Synonyms at shorten. [Middle English curtailen, to restrict the momentum of funded programmes, as well as funding for new grants. "New rounds of grants will provide the opportunity for countries to expand the considerable progress we are seeing against the three diseases", said Carol Jacobs Carol Jacobs (born New York City) is a former American othello player. In 1978, she was runner-up in the World Othello Championship. US champion 1977 and 1978. Placed 4th at the 1977 World Othello Championship and was runner-up at the 1978 WOC. , Chair of the Global Fund Board. "Donors need to make long-term commitments of sufficient resources to enable developing countries to plan for the future with confidence that funding for their life-saving activities will not trail off." Expected outcomes of grants approved by the Global Fund in rounds 1 to 5 after five years are: more than 1.8 million people on antiretrovirals; 62 million clients reached with voluntary counselling and testing services for HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. ; over 1 million orphans supported through medical services, education and community care; 5 million additional TB cases treated under DOTS; 264 million ACT treatments for drug-resistant malaria delivered; and 109 million bed nets financed to protect families from the transmission of malaria.
Performance Results at a Glance
Increase
Intervention December 2004 December 2005 June 2006 since 2005
HIV
People on ARV 130,000 384,000 544,000 42%
treatment
TB
Cases treated 385,000 1 million 1.4 million 43%
under DOTS
Malaria
Insecticide- 1.35 million 7.7 million 11.3 million 47%
treated nets
distributed
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