Secretary Clinton on the Global Health Initiative: More on the WHAT and the WHO, but Not the HOW

EDITOR’S NOTE: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said nothing new about the Global Health Initiative during her speech at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, notes Nandini Oomman, director of the HIV/AIDS Monitor at the Center for Global Development.  Clinton’s speech failed to specify how the U.S. government will implement GHI, she adds.

Secretary Hilary R. Clinton spoke yesterday at SAIS on the objectives of the Global Health Initiative (GHI).  The webcast of the event provided a forum for an interesting and interested set of tweeters (I participated) to point out what we heard and did not hear during the talk. My overall impression, echoed by several others (see here and here for two round ups of the discussion) was that while it was encouraging to hear Secretary Clinton reiterate the administration’s commitment to global health and its vision to transform the way in which global health is designed, delivered and managed, we did NOT hear anything new about the GHI:  for example, no specifics on HOW the U.S. will “do” the GHI and apply all its commendable principles, metrics for success, and global leadership?

The Missing “HOW” of the GHI

While I recognize that we’re still in the early stages of this very complex initiative, I believe that the administration could and should strive to communicate more clearly with the global health community about the implementation of the GHI. HOW exactly is the GHI being rolled out? Even colleagues who work on the ground in GHI countries are perplexed about the roll out.  It’s been well over a year since President Obama announced the GHI and stakeholders need to hear HOW the initiative is progressing. This communication is important for a few reasons:

Building stakeholder confidence with up-to-date evidence and information: Stakeholders across the world are worried about the success of the GHI, even though they agree with the goals and embrace the policy shifts toward sustainable, country-led global health delivery. But, the lack of public information has led to a growing lack of confidence in HOW exactly these goals, objectives and principles will be achieved. A couple of examples:

Building stakeholder knowledge about the GHI for greater accountability at all levels

Following through with pragmatic, but innovative thinking and actions to match ambitious goals about  transforming development

My wish list of actions for the GHI team:

Share information for greater learning and accountability

In the spirit of publish what you fund, I’m pleased to hear that we may have a USG GHI website very soon. This is very good news, but I sincerely hope that the website is an effective public relations/diplomacy tool AND a learning platform.  Here’s what I would like to see.

When the web site goes up: I hope that the new site will include:

As the GHI progresses: One of the goals of selecting GHI+ countries is to create development learning labs and document the process and outcomes. It would be terrific and useful if we could actually see a page for every GHI+ country and easily track key provisions of this visionary plan. For example, have funds been used effectively to integrate AIDS family planning and maternal and child health services? How are countries “owning” (or failing to own) their respective programs? Different countries present different challenges and learning opportunities for the GHI, and present an enormous opportunity for many different stakeholders to learn across different contexts.

Try new ideas for transformative global health and development and share what you learn

There is a growing discussion among development thinkers about incentivizing country governments to get development results, but not many ideas about how to do it. One idea is Cash On Delivery (COD) Aid, developed by my CGD colleagues, Nancy Birdsall, Bill Savedoff and Ayah Mahgoub. They propose that donors pay governments (almost like a bonus) for results—actual development outcomes that can be measured and audited—that the country achieves with the existing (aid and domestic) resources.  This is certainly one way to try to “embed a deep commitment” to global health and development, because countries, not donors, have to figure out how to design, implement and monitor their programs in order to succeed. The GHI could build pilots for COD Aid for specific health outcomes OR try other innovations to incentivize countries to produce results AND share this learning from GHI+ countries to demonstrate how development can begin to be transformative. This could be an exciting and innovative feature of the website.

Ultimately, the HOW of the GHI matters, especially when its goals and objectives are about changing the way in which development is done to produce long term and sustainable results. While health outcomes and impact measures will take time to achieve and to document, the GHI team must share its learning about implementation and interim measures towards expected impact, so that we can stop wondering if the GHI will ever realize its goals or not.

Re-published with permission by the Center for Global Development. Visit the original article.