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Global advances in hiv/aids monitoring and evaluation : new directions for evaluation 103 New Directions for Evaluation, Number 103 J–B PE Single Issue (Program) Evaluation Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Rugg Deborah, Peersman Greet, Carael Michel

Couverture de l’ouvrage Global advances in hiv/aids monitoring and evaluation : new directions for evaluation 103
The focus of this issue is on global advances in conducting monitoring and evaluation  (M&E) of the global response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Only by implementing comprehensive and sustainable M&E systems will we know how much progress we are making, as nations and as a global community, in combating this pandemic. The chapters primarily focus on developing nations and are presented largely from the perspective of evaluators working for donors, international agencies, and national governments. Although it is clear that a comprehensive M7E system must eventually include both monitoring and evluation, the initial aim has been to establish a foundation derived largely from surveys and monitoring information. To date, much of the focus in M&E has come from the global level because new global funding intiatives been launched and required rapid scale-up and the development of technical guidance, international standards, and indicators for monitoring progress and determining success. At the regional and country levels, the challenge has been to implement national M&E plans and systems within a context of overall low M&E capacity and a range of M&E needs.
Editors Notes (Deborah Rugg, Greet Peersman, Michel Carael).

1.Politics of Monitoring and Evaluation: Lessons from the AIDS Epidemic (Paul De Lay, Valerie Manda).
External pressures may suppress, limit, delay, manipulate, or selectively use monitoring and evaluation outputs.

2.Global Advances in Monitoring and Evaluation of HIV/AIDS: From AIDS Case Reporting to Program Improvement (Deborah Rugg, Michel Carael, Jan Ties Boerma, John Novak).
In the past twenty years, many international developments have occurred in HIV/AIDS monitoring and evaluation. global agencies are now taking deliberate steps toward creating a unified approach and organizing frameworks that link different data collection efforts.

3.Has the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS Made a Difference? (Nicole Massoud, Paul De Lay, Michel Carael).
The 2001 Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS by 189 countries serves as a benchmark for global action on HIV/AIDS. The authors focus on the added value of the declaration and on the lessons learned from the first round of reporting.

4. Efforts in Collaboration and Coordination of HIV/AIDS Monitoring and Evaluation: Contributions and Lessons of Two U.S. Government Agencies in a Global Partnership (Deborah Rugg, John Novak, Greet Peersman, Karen A. Heckert,
Jack Spencer, Katherine Marconi ).
This chapter highlights collaboration experiences in the global monitoring and evaluation (M&E) partnership to set international standards and provide direct M&E support to national AIDS programs.

5.Developing and Implementing Monitoring and Evaluation Methods in the New Era of Expanded Care and Treatment of HIV/AIDS (R. Cameron Wolf, George Bicego, Katherine Marconi, Ruth Bessinger, Eric van Praag, Shanti -Noriega Minichiello, Gregory Pappas, Nancy Fronczak, Greet Peersman, Renée K. Fiorentino, Deborah Rugg, John Novak).
As program planners and policymakers are deciding on the best approaches for scaling up HIV/AIDS care and treatment services, the M&E community has begun to develop the necessary methods and tools. The authors critique their experience with the development
and pilot testing of indicators and summarize the strengths and limitations of different -data collection methods.

6.World Bank contribution to Building National HIV/AIDS monitoring and Evaluation capacity in Africa: Going Beyond Indicator Development and Conceptual Training (David Wilson).
The author addresses M&E capacity building from the perspective of the World Banks recent efforts in supporting the implementation
of national M&E plans.

7.Monitoring and Evaluating the National Program to Prevent Mother to Child HIV Transmission in Thailand (Siripon Kanshana, Thananda Naiwatanakul, R. J. Simonds, Pornsinee Amornwichet, Achara Teeraratkul, Mary Culnane, Nartlada
Chantharojwong, Khanchit Limpakarnjanarat).
A national computerized system was developed to monitor the implementation of the national program for preventing -mother to child transmission at the hospital level, provide administrative data for resource allocation planning, and provide surveillance data on the prevalence of HIV infection among women in antenatal care.

8.Planning and Implementing a National monitoring and Evaluation System in Ghana: A Participatory and Decentralized Approach (Sylvia J. Anie, Emmanuel Tettey Larbi).
Considerations of practicality and feasibility, taking into account prevailing challenges and technological drawbacks, led to the development of a simple national M&E system with clear lines of responsibility and division of labor.

9.Intervention Research and Program Evaluation: the Need to Move B

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