This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-13-460 entitled 'President's Emergency Plan For Aids Relief: Shift toward Partner-Country Treatment Programs Will Require Better Information on Results' which was released on May 13, 2013. This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this document to Webmaster@gao.gov. This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this material separately. United States Government Accountability Office: GAO: Report to Congressional Requesters: April 2013: President's Emergency Plan For Aids Relief: Shift toward Partner-Country Treatment Programs Will Require Better Information on Results: GAO-13-460: GAO Highlights: Highlights of GAO-13-460, a report to congressional requesters. Why GAO Did This Study: PEPFAR, first authorized in 2003, has supported significant advances in HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and care in more than 30 countries. In reauthorizing the program in 2008, Congress directed OGAC to continue to expand the number of people receiving care and treatment through PEPFAR while also making it a major policy goal to help partner countries develop independent, sustainable HIV programs. As a result, PEPFAR began shifting efforts from directly providing treatment services toward support for treatment programs managed by partner countries. GAO was asked to review PEPFAR treatment programs. GAO examined (1) PEPFAR treatment program results and how OGAC measures them and (2) PEPFAR assistance to improve partner countries’ M&E systems. GAO reviewed PEPFAR plans, performance reports, and guidance and interviewed officials from OGAC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). GAO also synthesized findings of treatment program studies and conducted fieldwork in three countries. What GAO Found: The Department of State’s (State) Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC) has reported on President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) treatment program results primarily in terms of (1) numbers of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR, (2) percentages of eligible people receiving treatment, and (3) percentages of people alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment (see table for recently reported results). However, these indicators do not reflect some key PEPFAR results. First, although the number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR grew from about 1.7 million to 5.1 million in fiscal years 2008 through 2012, this indicator alone does not provide complete information needed for assessing PEPFAR’s contributions to partner countries’ treatment programs. Second, although 10 PEPFAR country teams reported that percentages of people alive and on treatment after 12 months exceeded 80 percent, data for this indicator are not always complete and have other limitations. To improve these data, according to OGAC officials, OGAC clarified its guidance and conducted data quality assessments. However, OGAC has not yet established a common set of indicators to monitor the results of PEPFAR’s efforts to improve the quality of treatment programs. Table: PEPFAR Treatment Indicators: Indicator: Number of people currently on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR; Source of data: PEPFAR direct treatment programs; Target: 5 million (fiscal year 2012); Reported results: 5.1 million (as of fiscal year 2012). Indicator: Percentage of eligible people receiving treatment; Source of data: Partner country treatment programs; Target: 80 percent; Reported results: 8 of 23 partner countries reported rates at or above 80 percent (as of 2011). Indicator: Percentage of people alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment; Source of data: PEPFAR direct treatment programs; Target: No target; Reported results: 10 of 23 partner countries reported rates at or above 80 percent (as of fiscal year 2012). Source: GAO synthesis of guidance and data from OGAC and data from the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS. Notes: In fiscal year 2012, 23 PEPFAR country teams providing direct support for treatment services were required to report to OGAC on these indicators. All 23 country teams provided data on number of people currently on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR and percentage of eligible people receiving treatment. Twenty country teams provided data on percentage of people alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment; 3 countries reported that data were not available for this indicator. [End of table] As PEPFAR partner countries assume greater responsibility for managing their treatment programs, fully functioning monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems are critical for tracking results and ensuring treatment program effectiveness. PEPFAR country teams assist partner countries in carrying out their M&E responsibilities by providing staff, training, technical assistance, and other support. With this assistance, partner countries have made some progress in expanding and upgrading these M&E systems. Nevertheless, partner countries’ M&E systems often are unable to produce complete and timely data, thus limiting the usefulness of these data for patient, clinic, or program management. OGAC has not yet established minimum standards for partner countries’ M&E systems, particularly relating to data completeness and timeliness, in order for PEPFAR country teams to assess those systems’ readiness for use in treatment program management and results reporting. What GAO Recommends: The Secretary of State should direct OGAC to (1) develop a method that better accounts for PEPFAR’s contributions to partner-country treatment programs, (2) establish a common set of indicators to measure the results of treatment program quality improvement efforts, and (3) establish a set of minimum standards for data generated by partner countries’ M&E systems. Commenting jointly with CDC and USAID, State generally agreed with the report’s recommendations. View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-460]. For more information, contact David Gootnick at (202) 512-3149 or gootnickd@gao.gov, or Marcia Crosse at (202) 512-7114 or crossem@gao.gov. [End of section] Contents: Letter: Background: Data Indicate Progress in Achieving Treatment Program Results, but Some Indicators Have Limitations: PEPFAR Supports Countries' M&E Systems, but Weaknesses Limit the Timeliness and Completeness of Treatment Results Data: Conclusions: Recommendations for Executive Action: Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: Appendix II: Criteria for Assessing PEPFAR Direct Support: Appendix III: Summary of Studies: Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of State: Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: Related GAO Products: Tables: Table 1: Key PEPFAR Treatment Indicators: Table 2: Numbers of People on Treatment Directly Supported by PEPFAR and Numbers of PEPFAR Countries Reporting on This Indicator, Fiscal Years 2004 through 2012: Table 3: Estimated PEPFAR Partner-Country Treatment Coverage Rates, 2011: Table 4: Reported PEPFAR Treatment Retention Rates, Fiscal Year 2012: Table 5: Checklist to Determine Whether to Count Service Delivery Support as PEPFAR Direct: Figure: Figure 1: Number of People on Treatment Directly Supported by PEPFAR, Fiscal Years 2004-2012, and Total Number of People on Treatment in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, Calendar Years 2004-2011: Abbreviations: 2008 Leadership Act: Tom Lantos and Henry J. Hyde United States Global Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Reauthorization Act of 2008: ARV: antiretroviral: CD4: cluster of differentiation antigen 4: CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Global Fund: Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria: HHS: Department of Health and Human Services: M&E: monitoring and evaluation: OGAC: Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator: PEPFAR: President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: State: Department of State: UNAIDS: Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS: USAID: U.S. Agency for International Development: WHO: World Health Organization: [End of section] United States Government Accountability Office: Washington, DC 20548: April 12, 2013: Congressional Requesters: As the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) nears the end of its second 5-year authorization,[Footnote 1] it has made significant contributions to international treatment targets for HIV/AIDS.[Footnote 2] The Department of State's (State) Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC) reported that, as of September 30, 2012, the U.S. government, through PEPFAR's multibillion dollar investments in partner countries' treatment and care programs, had directly supported treatment for more than 5.1 million people--more than half of all people on treatment for HIV/AIDS in low-and middle- income countries. In part because of these investments, more than half of eligible people in low-and middle-income countries (54 percent) receive treatment, and the estimated number of AIDS-related deaths worldwide (1.7 million) declined in 2011, according to data reported by the United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). Nevertheless, important challenges remain as PEPFAR continues to help build partner countries' capacity to manage their treatment programs. First, the estimated number of new HIV infections worldwide each year (2.5 million in 2011) continues to exceed the estimated increase in the number of people on treatment (about 1.4 million from 2010 to 2011), and about 6.8 million people eligible for treatment have not yet been treated.[Footnote 3] In addition, in passing the Tom Lantos and Henry J. Hyde United States Global Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Reauthorization Act of 2008 (2008 Leadership Act),[Footnote 4] Congress directed OGAC to continue to expand the number of people receiving PEPFAR HIV care and treatment services while also making it a major policy goal to build partner-country capacity to deliver services and promote a transition toward greater sustainability of country-owned HIV/AIDS programs. In December 2011, the President announced an increase in PEPFAR's target for the number of people receiving treatment directly supported by PEPFAR--from 4 million to 6 million by the end of fiscal year 2013. OGAC sets overall PEPFAR policy and strategies. OGAC also coordinates PEPFAR programs and activities, allocating funds to PEPFAR implementing agencies, particularly the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). OGAC is leading PEPFAR's transition from an early focus on directly providing treatment services as part of an emergency response, to building partner countries' capacity to manage treatment programs. During this transition, ensuring HIV care and treatment program quality remains critical to achieving patient and public health outcomes, even as annual allocations to PEPFAR remain unchanged or decline.[Footnote 5] You asked us to review HIV/AIDS treatment programs supported through PEPFAR. This is the second of three reports responding to your request. We recently issued a related report on PEPFAR treatment program costs[Footnote 6] and will soon issue a report on PEPFAR supply chains. In this report, we examine (1) PEPFAR treatment program results and how OGAC measures them and (2) PEPFAR assistance to improve partner countries' monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems. We also provide information--related to treatment program retention, patient-level health outcomes, and strengths and weaknesses of partner- country M&E systems--drawn from studies of treatment programs in PEPFAR partner countries.[Footnote 7] To address our objectives, we reviewed PEPFAR guidance issued by OGAC regarding PEPFAR indicators, definitions, and planning and reporting requirements, and we reviewed prior GAO reports on PEPFAR. We examined PEPFAR partnership frameworks and PEPFAR's most recent operational plans and performance reports as well as data provided by OGAC. We determined that these data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our reporting. We interviewed OGAC, CDC, and USAID officials in Atlanta, Georgia, and Washington, D.C., and conducted field work in South Africa, Uganda, and Kenya. (See appendix I for further details of our scope and methodology.) We conducted this performance audit from May 2012 to April 2013 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. Background: OGAC is responsible for establishing overall PEPFAR policy and program strategies and allocating funds from the Global Health and Child Survival account to PEPFAR implementing agencies, primarily CDC and USAID.[Footnote 8] These agencies execute PEPFAR program activities through agency headquarters offices and in-country interagency teams (PEPFAR country teams) and their implementing partners[Footnote 9] in the 33 countries and three regions with PEPFAR-funded programs as of fiscal year 2012.[Footnote 10] OGAC coordinates these activities through its approval of operational plans, which document work plans, budgets, and the anticipated results of HIV/AIDS-related programs. OGAC also provides annual guidance to PEPFAR country teams on how to develop and submit operational plans. For fiscal years 2009 through 2012, OGAC approved country operational plan budgets totaling over $16 billion. Country operational plan activities fit broadly in three areas: prevention, treatment, and care. Other program budget areas are laboratory infrastructure, strategic information, and health systems strengthening. To promote a more sustainable approach to combating HIV/AIDS, characterized by PEPFAR countries' strengthened capacity, ownership, and leadership, the 2008 Leadership Act authorized the U.S. government to establish partnership frameworks with partner countries.[Footnote 11] These frameworks are 5-year joint strategic agreements for cooperation between the U.S. government and partner governments to combat HIV/AIDS in the partner country through technical assistance and support for service delivery, policy reform, and coordinated funding commitments.[Footnote 12] As of February 2013, the U.S. government had signed 22 PEPFAR partnership frameworks.[Footnote 13] According to OGAC guidance, a key expectation of the frameworks is that partner-country governments will become better prepared to assume primary responsibility for their responses to HIV/AIDS. Moreover, PEPFAR's 2012 "blueprint"[Footnote 14] defines country ownership as the end state in which partner countries lead, manage, and coordinate the efforts needed to ensure that the AIDS response is effective, efficient, and durable. PEPFAR supports a broad continuum of HIV care and treatment services in partner countries. This continuum begins with HIV testing and the counseling given to patients learning their HIV status. If patients are HIV positive, their eligibility for treatment must be determined on the basis of clinical criteria (symptoms associated with HIV), laboratory criteria (strength of patients' immune systems),[Footnote 15] or both clinical and laboratory criteria. The World Health Organization (WHO) establishes international guidelines on when to initiate treatment for specific groups of HIV-positive people, such as adult patients who have never been on treatment, pediatric patients, and pregnant and breastfeeding women. In November 2010, WHO updated its guidelines by reducing the minimum eligibility threshold in its laboratory criteria[Footnote 16] and by recommending treatment for all people coinfected with HIV and tuberculosis, thereby expanding the number of people eligible for treatment. Based on WHO guidelines, each country is expected to establish country-specific guidelines on when to initiate treatment for these groups. UNAIDS estimated at the end of 2011 that, on the basis of WHO's 2010 guidelines, 15 million people in low-and middle-income countries needed treatment; of these, an estimated 8 million people are on treatment. People who are HIV positive but not yet eligible for treatment generally may seek access to care and support services as well as regular checkups and laboratory monitoring. People eligible for treatment should receive antiretroviral (ARV) drugs as well as checkups and monitoring to assess the effectiveness of treatment.[Footnote 17] People on treatment also receive various care and support services such as treatment of opportunistic infections including tuberculosis coinfection, nutritional support, and programs to promote adherence to treatment and remaining on treatment (patient retention). People on treatment are expected to take ARV drugs on a continuing, lifelong basis. PEPFAR country teams report to OGAC semiannually, usually in May, and annually, usually in November, on PEPFAR program results. These reports, containing data and narratives, are intended to support program monitoring, midcourse correction, and planning for subsequent fiscal years. Data on PEPFAR program results also supply information for OGAC's annual report to Congress on PEPFAR performance.[Footnote 18] Since fiscal year 2010, OGAC's Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide has provided an updated list of indicators for establishing targets and reporting on PEPFAR results.[Footnote 19] According to the guidance, these indicators are intended to demonstrate progress in the fight against HIV/AIDS while also promoting responsible program management. In addition, among other things, the guidance establishes a distinction between national results and PEPFAR direct results. The guidance defines national results as achievements of all contributors to a partner country's HIV/AIDS program and defines PEPFAR direct results as achievements of the PEPFAR program through its funded activities. (See app. II for a summary of OGAC criteria for assessing PEPFAR direct support.) With regard to treatment programs, the guidance instructs PEPFAR country teams providing direct support for treatment services[Footnote 20] to report to OGAC using the PEPFAR direct indicators.[Footnote 21] In addition, the guidance directed these country teams, as well as PEPFAR country teams providing technical assistance and other support to build partner-country capacity for managing treatment programs, to report on one national indicator. Table 1 summarizes these indicators. Table 1: Key PEPFAR Treatment Indicators: Indicator: Number of people currently on treatment[A]; Source of data: PEPFAR direct treatment programs; Definition: Number of adults and children with advanced HIV infection who are currently receiving treatment directly supported by PEPFAR; Target: Fiscal year 2012: 5 million; Fiscal year 2013: 6 million. Indicator: Treatment coverage; Source of data: Partner country treatment programs; Definition: Percentage of adults and children with advanced HIV infection receiving treatment; Target: 80 percent[B]. Indicator: Treatment retention; Source of data: PEPFAR direct treatment programs; Definition: Percentage of adults and children known to be alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment; Target: None[C]. Source: GAO synthesis of guidance and information provided by OGAC. [A] Since fiscal year 2010, PEPFAR country teams providing direct support for treatment services have also been required to report the number of adults and children newly enrolled in treatment programs in the previous year, disaggregating by age and sex. This indicator permits OGAC and country teams to monitor trends in treatment initiation and, thus, treatment program expansion. Because data are also disaggregated by pregnancy status, the indicator also provides data linking treatment programs with programs to prevent the transmission of HIV from mother to child. [B] Each country sets its own targets for national treatment coverage rates. According to UNAIDS, most countries have set 80 percent as their target for treatment coverage. [C] High retention rates indicate that more people on treatment are surviving. However, targets for treatment retention generally are not established. [End of table] Data Indicate Progress in Achieving Treatment Program Results, but Some Indicators Have Limitations: From fiscal year 2010 through 2012, OGAC reported PEPFAR results in terms of three primary indicators: (1) the number of people currently on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR (PEPFAR direct number of people on treatment), (2) the percentages of eligible people receiving treatment in partner countries (national treatment coverage rates), and (3) the percentage of adults and children known to be alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment (PEPFAR direct treatment retention rates). However, two of these indicators have limitations that could affect their usefulness. Regarding the first indicator, although the number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR has increased significantly, this indicator alone does not provide complete information needed for assessing PEPFAR's contributions to partner countries' treatment programs. Regarding the third indicator, 10 PEPFAR country teams reported percentages of adults and children known to be alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment that exceeded 80 percent. However, the treatment retention data are not always complete and have other limitations, which OGAC acknowledged and is taking steps to address. In addition to these limitations, OGAC lacks a common set of indicators for monitoring quality assurance efforts. Although OGAC indicated in 2010 that it would establish a common set of indicators to monitor the results of PEPFAR's efforts to improve the quality of treatment programs, it has not yet done so. PEPFAR Exceeded Its Fiscal Year 2012 Direct Treatment Target, but This Indicator Does Not Fully Reflect PEPFAR Contributions to Partner- Country Treatment Programs: Responding to treatment-related requirements in the 2008 Leadership Act,[Footnote 22] OGAC reports on the number of people currently on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR as a key indicator of program results.[Footnote 23] This number is calculated by determining the number of people who ever started treatment at facilities where PEPFAR directly supports treatment services, minus patients who died, stopped treatment, transferred out, or have unknown treatment outcomes.[Footnote 24] (See app. II for a summary of OGAC guidance on determining whether people can be counted as receiving direct services through PEPFAR.) PEPFAR met or exceeded annual targets for this indicator in fiscal years 2004 through 2012. Currently, this indicator is used to track treatment program expansion and to assess progress toward PEPFAR's target of providing direct support for treatment for 6 million people by the end of fiscal year 2013.[Footnote 25] For fiscal year 2012, PEPFAR's target for this indicator was 5 million people. According to data provided by OGAC, the number of people currently on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR has steadily increased from about 67,000 people in 11 countries in fiscal year 2004 to more than 5.1 million in 23 countries in fiscal year 2012.[Footnote 26] (See table 2.) Table 2: Numbers of People on Treatment Directly Supported by PEPFAR and Numbers of PEPFAR Countries Reporting on This Indicator, Fiscal Years 2004 through 2012: PEPFAR direct number of people currently on treatment; 2004: 66,700; 2005: 249,200; 2006: 541,300; 2007: 1,091,600; 2008: 1,743,600; 2009: 2,485,300; 2010: 3,195,000; 2011: 3,905,000; 2012: 5,057,500. Number of PEPFAR country teams reporting on this indicator[A]; 2004: 11; 2005: 12; 2006: 18; 2007: 24; 2008: 24; 2009: 24; 2010: 23; 2011: 23; 2012: 23. Source: OGAC. Note: Numbers of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR have been rounded to the nearest hundred. [A] In 2004, OGAC reported direct treatment results for 11 PEPFAR partner countries and added countries as PEPFAR's investments in them increased. Twenty-three PEPFAR country teams provided direct treatment services in fiscal year 2012: Botswana, Cambodia, China, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Guyana, Haiti, India, Kenya, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. [End of table] Furthermore, the number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR was about half of the total number of people on treatment in all low-and middle-income countries, which UNAIDS estimated at 8 million in 2011 (see figure 1). Figure 1: Number of People on Treatment Directly Supported by PEPFAR, Fiscal Years 2004-2012, and Total Number of People on Treatment in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, Calendar Years 2004-2011: [Refer to PDF for image: stacked line graph] Year: 2004; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 66,700; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 695,960. Year: 2005; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 249,200; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 1,311,930. Year: 2006; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 541,300; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 2,034,000. Year: 2007; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 1,091,600; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 2,969,040. Year: 2008; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 1,743,600; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 3,400,640. Year: 2009; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 2,485,300; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 5,239,280. Year: 2010; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 3,195,000; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 6,577,030. Year: 2011; Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 3,905,500; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 8,006,540. Year: 2012 (projected); Number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR: 5,057,500; Total number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries: 9,457,500. Source: PEPFAR and UNAIDS data. Notes: We estimated the total number of people that received treatment in 2012, because UNAIDS data for low-and middle-income countries are reported for calendar years and were not available for 2012 at the time of this report's publication. PEPFAR data are reported for U.S. government fiscal years. [End of figure] As PEPFAR has begun to shift resources toward providing technical assistance and other support to help partner countries build their capacity to manage treatment programs, PEPFAR's direct treatment indicator has increasingly fallen short of reflecting results of PEPFAR's contributions to partner countries' treatment programs. Specifically, this indicator does not reflect the expansion of partner countries' treatment programs that PEPFAR technical assistance and other support for building treatment program management capacity have made possible. These efforts include, among others, activities such as implementing revised treatment guidelines, assisting partner-country district and national health officials with treatment facility oversight, and training and mentoring treatment facility staff. In several PEPFAR partner countries, for example, PEPFAR implementing partners providing direct treatment services have begun transferring stable patients to other treatment providers, including an often expanding number of local public and private health clinics, many of which receive PEPFAR-funded technical assistance and other support. In part because of this PEPFAR assistance, these providers also have begun increasing the number of people they enroll in treatment. In such cases, the PEPFAR direct treatment indicator may not account for these people. In the past, PEPFAR's direct results often were equivalent to the national number of people receiving services, including treatment, according to PEPFAR's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide. However, as PEPFAR increases its efforts to build partner-country capacity to manage treatment programs through technical assistance and other support, PEPFAR's direct treatment indicator alone does not provide complete information for assessing PEPFAR's contributions to partner countries' treatment programs. PEPFAR's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide noted that OGAC was working on a method for deriving PEPFAR direct results from partner-country national-level indicators but had not yet devised one. [Footnote 27] The guidance stated that the new method would take into account the percentage of PEPFAR funding that contributes to partner- country programs. In addition, OGAC and PEPFAR country teams have considered other factors to determine PEPFAR's contribution to partner- country treatment programs. For example, in their fiscal year 2011 annual reports to OGAC, seven PEPFAR country teams reported the proportion of all treatment facilities receiving PEPFAR support or the percentage of all patients on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR. Some country teams noted that neither method fully accounted for PEPFAR's contributions in these countries. As of February 2013, according to a senior OGAC official, OGAC had drafted a method for representing PEPFAR contributions based on proportional financial support to partner-country program results but had not finalized the method or revised its guidance to PEPFAR country teams. PEPFAR Has Helped Increase Partner Countries' National Treatment Coverage Rates: Increases in the number of people on treatment have helped improve partner countries' national treatment coverage rates--generally defined as the percentage of eligible people receiving treatment. [Footnote 28] According to the most current UNAIDS and PEPFAR data, [Footnote 29] 8 of the 23 countries where PEPFAR directly supported treatment services in 2011 achieved estimated treatment coverage rates of 80 percent or more (see table 3).[Footnote 30] Although the remaining 15 countries fell short of this target, almost all of these countries have increased their estimated treatment coverage rates since 2009, according to our analysis of UNAIDS data. Table 3: Estimated PEPFAR Partner-Country Treatment Coverage Rates, 2011: Partner countries where PEPFAR supports direct treatment services: 20-39%: China[A]; Democratic Republic of the Congo[B]; Nigeria. 40-59%: Côte d'Ivoire; Ethiopia; Haiti; Lesotho; Mozambique; Tanzania; Uganda; Vietnam. 60-79%: Kenya; Malawi; South Africa; Zimbabwe. 80% or more: Partner countries where PEPFAR supports direct treatment services: Botswana; Cambodia; Dominican Republic; Guyana; Namibia; Rwanda; Swaziland; Zambia. Partner countries where PEPFAR provides only technical assistance and other support for treatment: : Less than 20%: South Sudan. 20-39%: Angola; Indonesia; Kazakhstan[C]; Kyrgyzstan[C]; Russia; Tajikistan[C]; Ukraine. 40-59%: Belize[D]; Burundi; Congo; Ghana; Guatemala[D]; Honduras[D]; India; Panama[D]; Suriname[E]. 60-79%: Costa Rica[D]; El Salvador[D]; Jamaica[D]; Nicaragua[D]; Thailand. Source: UNAIDS 2012 Global Report: UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic and UNAIDS data. Note: All PEPFAR countries providing direct treatment services, as well as those building partner-country treatment program management capacity through technical assistance and other support, report estimated national coverage rate information to OGAC. [A] Data on China's 2011 national coverage rate were not available from UNAIDS. In its fiscal year 2011 report to OGAC, the PEPFAR country team provided information on China's 2010 national treatment coverage rate. Based on this information, we placed China in the 20-39 percent category in this table. [B] Data on the Democratic Republic of the Congo's 2011 national coverage rate were not available from UNAIDS. In its fiscal year 2011 report to OGAC, the PEPFAR country team provided information on the national treatment coverage rate as of June, 2011. Based on this information, we placed the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the 20- 39 percent category in this table. [C] PEPFAR's Central Asian region comprises Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Treatment coverage data were not available for Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. [D] PEPFAR's Central American region comprises Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama. PEPFAR funding for Belize is approved jointly through the Caribbean and Central American regional operational plans. [E] PEPFAR's Caribbean region comprises Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago. Of these countries, treatment coverage data were available for Jamaica and Suriname only. [End of table] PEPFAR Data on Treatment Retention Indicate Some Progress but Have Limitations: Since fiscal year 2010, OGAC has required PEPFAR country teams providing direct support for treatment services to track treatment retention rates, an indicator defined as the percentage of adults and children known to be alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment. In addition to being an essential indicator of treatment program outcomes--a higher retention rate indicates that more people on treatment are surviving--facilities' retention rates are used by OGAC and PEPFAR country teams as a proxy indicator of treatment program quality. Of the 23 PEPFAR country teams directly providing treatment services, 20 provided data on this indicator in their fiscal year 2012 reports to OGAC. Ten of the 20 teams reported retention rates at or above 80 percent for facilities where PEPFAR implementing partners support direct treatment services. (See table 4.) Table 4: Reported PEPFAR Treatment Retention Rates, Fiscal Year 2012: Less than 60%: Côte d'Ivoire. 60-69%: Malawi; Tanzania; Zambia; South Africa. 70-79%: Cambodia; Lesotho; Mozambique; Nigeria; Uganda. 80-89%: Democratic Republic of the Congo; Ethiopia; Guyana; Haiti; Namibia; Swaziland; Vietnam. More than 90%: Botswana; China; Rwanda. Source: GAO analysis of PEPFAR country teams' fiscal year 2011 and 2012 annual reports and information provided by OGAC. Note: PEPFAR country teams for the Dominican Republic, Kenya, and Zimbabwe reported that treatment retention data were not available for fiscal year 2012. [End of table] However, PEPFAR patient retention data have several key limitations. * The data are not always complete. PEPFAR's reported retention rates reflect only the rates at facilities where PEPFAR directly supported treatment services and that were able to properly collect and report retention data. In addition, in their fiscal year 2012 reports to OGAC, three PEPFAR country teams reported that data for this indicator were not available. Several country teams noted problems in obtaining data from partner-country systems or from all sites where PEPFAR directly supports treatment services. Several country teams also reported concerns about data quality, including limited understanding of how to collect these data. * Methods and definitions vary. For example, PEPFAR country teams accounted for patients transferring to or from treatment facilities differently. In addition, country teams used different definitions to count numbers of patients lost to follow-up (i.e., those with unknown outcomes, including possible death, treatment cessation, or self- transfer to another treatment facility). Under the current WHO definition, a patient may be considered lost to follow-up 90 days after the last scheduled appointment, but the definition may be adjusted depending on the stage of a patient's treatment. * Data on treatment retention are rarely available for key populations, including children and adolescents, injecting drug users, men who have sex with men, and sex workers. These populations are at higher risk for HIV infection and may face specific challenges that make it more difficult to retain them in treatment programs. * Few data on long-term retention (after 24 months from the start of treatment) are available. Although OGAC guidance encourages PEPFAR country teams to use data for cohorts of patients to track retention and survival at 24, 36, and 48 months, PEPFAR does not have a retention indicator that extends beyond 12 months.[Footnote 31] OGAC officials stated that OGAC has taken several steps to improve the fiscal year 2012 PEPFAR treatment retention data. First, OGAC clarified guidance to PEPFAR country teams regarding how to calculate and report on this indicator. Second, PEPFAR implementing agencies conducted data quality assessments in three PEPFAR countries. As a result, according to OGAC officials, three more PEPFAR country teams were able to report on the treatment retention indicator in fiscal year 2012 than in fiscal year 2011. Furthermore, OGAC officials stated that data completeness is a priority for the current fiscal year 2013 and that they will help PEPFAR country teams with reporting retention data. In addition to routinely reported information on treatment program results, various studies of treatment programs, although they may not represent national treatment program conditions and may be limited by incomplete data, provide information that can be useful for improving the results of treatment programs. Appendix III contains examples of information provided by studies we identified. PEPFAR Supports Efforts to Improve Treatment Program Quality, but OGAC Has Not Established Indicators to Assess Results: PEPFAR country teams engage in a number of activities, often characterized as technical assistance or support, whose aim is to assure the quality of treatment programs. Seventeen of the 22 countries with PEPFAR partnership frameworks identified efforts to improve treatment program quality as a key goal shared by partner countries and PEPFAR. However, OGAC has not established a common set of indicators to assess results of these activities. We identified several examples of quality assurance activities, such as: * developing and implementing partner-country quality improvement strategies, including roles and responsibilities for health facility supervision; * establishing treatment site-level performance improvement plans, including quality improvement council meetings to identify solutions to problems affecting service quality; and: * training health facility managers and staff to track and use facility-level performance data. OGAC's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide sought to emphasize program quality indicators to help strengthen partner countries' HIV/AIDS programs. To this end, the guidance added patient retention rate to the list of essential, reported treatment program indicators. The same guidance also recommended tracking data for several indicators of treatment program quality--for example, the number of patients with a documented CD4 or viral load test, the number of patients who have attended the recommended number of clinical visits, and the percentage of health facilities providing treatment using CD4 monitoring in line with partner-country guidelines or policies. In the three countries we visited, we found that PEPFAR implementing partners were using a wide range of indicators to report on their quality assurance activities. Examples of such indicators include percentages of (1) HIV-positive patients assessed for treatment eligibility, (2) patients on treatment who adhere to the dosing instructions and other requirements for taking ARV medicines, and (3) patients with good clinical outcomes. However, even where indicators in the three countries were generally the same, definitions varied slightly. For example, in reporting on the indicator of appointments kept, three PEPFAR implementing partners--all providing quality assurance assistance to treatment facilities in the same country--used two different definitions. One implementing partner reported on the percentage of HIV-positive patients who kept their appointments in the previous month or quarter, while the other two implementing partners reported on the percentage of HIV-positive patients who missed their appointments. OGAC's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide stated that additional guidance on quality assurance indicators for PEPFAR implementing agencies would be forthcoming. However, as of February 2013, OGAC has not issued this additional guidance. The lack of PEPFAR- wide guidance on quality assurance indicators and definitions inhibits development of standardized measurement tools used by PEPFAR country teams to monitor treatment facilities supported by PEPFAR and ultimately track the results of PEPFAR's quality assurance efforts, including technical assistance and other support. PEPFAR Supports Countries' M&E Systems, but Weaknesses Limit the Timeliness and Completeness of Treatment Results Data: To track the results of partner-country treatment programs and to help ensure that they are effective, PEPFAR supports countries' monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems. While some progress has been made in expanding and upgrading them, these systems often are unable to produce timely and complete treatment data, limiting their usefulness for managing programs and reporting program results. PEPFAR country teams fulfill many M&E functions at facilities where PEPFAR supports direct treatment services, and they assist partner countries in carrying out their M&E responsibilities by providing staff, training, and technical assistance and other support. Nevertheless, partner countries' M&E systems continue to face a number of weaknesses. Consequently, PEPFAR country teams primarily use data drawn from PEPFAR-specific systems to report on PEPFAR treatment program results. OGAC has not yet issued guidance needed to support PEPFAR's continued progress in transitioning to using partner-country M&E systems for program management and results reporting. PEPFAR Provides Technical Assistance, Training, and Staff to Strengthen Partner Countries' M&E Systems: Among other activities, OGAC technical guidance to PEPFAR country teams calls for the development of partner countries' M&E systems, among other activities. Fully functioning M&E systems are essential for effective patient monitoring and patient management[Footnote 32] and also generate data that PEPFAR country teams and partner countries need to track treatment program results.[Footnote 33] All countries and regions with PEPFAR partnership frameworks identified strengthening M&E systems as a key goal shared by partner countries and PEPFAR.[Footnote 34] To support this goal, according to fiscal year 2012 PEPFAR operational plans, PEPFAR country teams provide, among other things, technical assistance, training, and staff to treatment facilities, district health offices, and national ministries of health to collect, aggregate, and report treatment program information through partner countries' M&E systems (see sidebar). This support included recruiting, mentoring, and training health facility staff and district health officials responsible for collecting, analyzing, aggregating, and reporting data through the country's M&E system. PEPFAR country teams were also assisting partner countries with conducting surveys and surveillance, such as those needed to estimate the number of people with advanced HIV infection. In addition, according to OGAC officials, as of February 2013, 15 PEPFAR partner countries have expressed interest in a single, open-source data system, and several of these countries have started implementation. This health information software tool supports collecting, analyzing, and reporting national health data, including data on treatment programs. According to these officials, PEPFAR will support partner-country expansion of the software tool to include PEPFAR and Global Fund reporting in two additional PEPFAR partner countries. Weaknesses Remain in Partner Countries' M&E Systems: Side bar: 2 photographs: The photo above shows a patient file and paper register used at a primary health care facility receiving PEPFAR technical assistance in Mpumalanga province, South Africa. The photo below shows three data capturers entering patient data into an electronic database at a health facility in Kampala, Uganda. children and women. Source: GAO. [End of side bar] PEPFAR country teams have documented weaknesses in a number of partner countries' M&E systems, which are at various stages of implementation. Our review of PEPFAR country teams' fiscal year 2011 annual reports to OGAC and fiscal year 2012 operational plans identified two key challenges for partner countries' M&E systems. Partner countries' M&E systems often are unable to produce complete and timely data, thus limiting their usefulness for patient, clinic, or program management. In their 2011 annual reports to OGAC, 12 PEPFAR country teams cited timeliness of partner-country treatment program data as a challenge, often because partner-country reporting time frames differed from the U.S. government fiscal year. In addition, three PEPFAR country teams noted that data provided by partner countries' M&E systems were incomplete--not all provinces or treatment facilities reported data into the system. In addition, one PEPFAR country was not able to collect data on the number of patients currently receiving treatment, because the partner country provided data only on the cumulative number of patients who had ever started treatment; the country team noted that this had the likely effect of inflating the partner country's treatment coverage rate. Furthermore, partner-country health officials, often lacking technical capacity, do not always use available data for decision making. Our review of the PEPFAR country teams' operational plans found that 23 teams cited the need to improve data use at treatment facilities or other levels of the health care system. For example, one country team reported that partner-country health officials tended to focus on data collection for reporting rather than for policy, planning, and program decision making. Another country team reported that lack of data reporting by treatment facilities limited analysis of treatment patients across facilities, and a third country team noted that human resource limitations and weak research capacity impeded use of M&E data. In addition, studies of PEPFAR partner countries' M&E systems that we identified provided additional information; appendix III provides a summary of this information. PEPFAR Country Teams Aim to Integrate M&E Systems, but OGAC Has Not Established Minimum Standards to Guide This Effort: Because of the limitations associated with the data from national M&E systems, PEPFAR country teams primarily use data drawn from systems created specifically for reporting PEPFAR treatment program results. OGAC's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide states that PEPFAR country teams may need to rely on these systems in the short term but should continue working to integrate these systems into partner countries' M&E systems. Our review of PEPFAR country teams' operational plans found that PEPFAR country teams maintained PEPFAR program performance management systems to routinely collect, compile, and analyze patient monitoring and management data from the health facilities where PEPFAR directly supports treatment services. In addition, PEPFAR country teams use these data to generate their semiannual and annual reports to OGAC. PEPFAR country teams supplement information from their own systems with data from partner countries' M&E systems, including numbers of patients on treatment and rates of treatment coverage. OGAC's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide recommends several indicators for tracking partner-country outcomes related to strengthening health systems, such as the existence of M&E plans and the percentage of health facilities with record-keeping systems for monitoring HIV/AIDS programs.[Footnote 35] In addition, OGAC's technical guidance to country teams for developing partner countries' M&E systems identifies a number of key efforts, such as developing M&E leadership and organizations, improving the policy environment, and ensuring the advancement and sustainability of technical capacity in PEPFAR partner countries. The technical guidance states that these efforts should support national capacity building. However, OGAC has not issued guidance identifying minimum standards that data generated by partner countries' M&E systems should meet--such as standards related to completeness and timeliness--in order for PEPFAR country teams to assess, together with partner countries and other donors, whether the systems are ready for use in PEPFAR program management and results reporting. The lack of such standards leaves uncertain the point at which partner-country M&E systems are mature enough for PEPFAR to rely on them. This uncertainty is likely to delay achievement of PEPFAR's goal of using partner-country M&E systems to generate data for PEPFAR treatment program management and reporting. Conclusions: Ensuring that PEPFAR treatment programs continue to improve and to operate as effectively as possible requires careful, complex monitoring and evaluation (M&E), not only of program results but also of quality assurance efforts. Available data on PEPFAR program results show some progress. In particular, PEPFAR and UNAIDS data indicate a steady increase in the number of people on treatment, improved treatment coverage rates, and high rates of patient retention at many facilities. However, PEPFAR's contributions to expansion of partner countries' treatment programs are not fully reflected in its results data because OGAC's current method for deriving PEPFAR's direct treatment indicator does not fully account for PEPFAR's efforts to improve partner countries' capacity to manage their treatment programs. This limits the usefulness of PEPFAR's direct treatment indicator for assessing progress toward expanding partner-country treatment programs. Furthermore, OGAC has not yet established a common set of indicators to measure the results of PEPFAR technical assistance and other support intended to improve the quality of treatment programs. Lacking a standard set of quality assurance indicators, PEPFAR is limited in its ability to track the results of PEPFAR's quality assurance efforts. As PEPFAR continues to shift responsibility for managing treatment programs to partner countries, those countries will need robust M&E systems to generate the data that are indispensable for ensuring effective treatment and efficient program management. PEPFAR has dedicated resources specifically for these efforts, but problems with untimely and incomplete data collection, as well as with data use, persist. As a result, PEPFAR has to rely on the M&E systems its implementing partners have developed rather than on country-managed systems for collecting and reporting results data. In its guidance, OGAC has not yet established minimum standards that data generated by partner countries' M&E systems should meet in order for PEPFAR country teams to assess these systems. Without such standards, uncertainty remains as to when partner-country M&E systems will be ready to be integrated with PEPFAR systems, thus delaying the achievement of PEPFAR's goal of using partner-country M&E system data for PEPFAR treatment program management and reporting. Recommendations for Executive Action: To ensure the outcomes and quality of treatment programs supported by PEPFAR, we recommend that the Secretary of State direct the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator to take the following three actions in collaboration with PEPFAR implementing agencies: * develop a method that better accounts for PEPFAR's contributions to partner-country treatment programs; * establish a common set of indicators to measure the results of treatment program quality improvement efforts; and: * establish a set of minimum standards for data generated by partner countries' M&E systems, to enable PEPFAR country teams to assess those systems' readiness for use in treatment program management and reporting. Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: Weprovided a draft of this reportto State, USAID, and CDC. Responding jointly with CDC and USAID, Stateprovided written comments(see appendix IV for a copy of these comments). State and CDC also provided technical comments and supplementary information relating to our findings and recommendations. In response to the technical comments, we incorporated changes to the draft report, as appropriate. After reviewing the supplementary information, we clarified our findings and recommendations relating to PEPFAR’s direct treatment indicator and its support for partner countries’ M&E systems." In its written comments, State generally agreed with our three recommendations. First, State affirmed that it supports our recommendation to develop a method for fully accounting for PEPFAR's contributions to partner-country treatment programs. Observing that PEPFAR's direct treatment indicator was intended to capture only essential components of direct treatment services, State noted that PEPFAR has recently begun an effort to revise its monitoring, evaluation, and reporting framework, including an expansion of indicators that would allow for implementing partners to report on their efforts to help partner countries build capacity and develop sustainable treatment programs. Second, State also agreed with the finding leading to our recommendation regarding the development of indicators to measure the results of treatment program quality improvement efforts. State cited the need for a harmonized PEPFAR strategy on treatment quality, including key indicators, and noted steps it is taking to develop such a strategy. In addition, stressing that treatment retention indicators are relatively new and difficult to operationalize, State detailed steps PEPFAR is taking to help improve treatment retention measurement, evaluation, and performance. Third, State noted that PEPFAR supports the strengthening of partner country reporting systems and works with partner countries to help them develop such systems, both to support national programs as well as to provide data for PEPFAR and other donors. As part of these efforts, PEPFAR also works with WHO and the Global Fund on system standardization and standards for data exchange. State specifically identified an indicator developed by WHO for documenting data completeness and timeliness and stated that this indicator can be used to monitor efforts to develop these reporting systems. We agree that such an indicator could be useful for PEPFAR country teams trying to determine when partner-country M&E systems are ready to be integrated with PEPFAR systems. However, we note that PEPFAR guidance does not instruct country teams to use the WHO indicator or any other indicator for this purpose. We believe that specifying one or more indicators for PEPFAR country teams to use is important to ensure a consistent approach to systems integration across the program. Doing this would emphasize for country partners the importance of harmonizing M&E systems for mutually beneficial purposes. As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days from the report date. At that time, we will send copies to the Secretary of State and the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator. The report also will be available at no charge on the GAO website at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please contact me at (202) 512-3149 or gootnickd@gao.gov or contact Marcia Crosse at (202) 512-7114 or crossem@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to this report are listed in appendix V. Signed by: David Gootnick: Director, International Affairs and Trade: Signed by: Marcia Crosse: Director, Health Care: List of Requesters: The Honorable Lamar Alexander: Ranking Member: Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: United States Senate: The Honorable Tom Coburn, MD: Ranking Member: Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: United States Senate: The Honorable Richard Burr: Ranking Member: Subcommittee on Primary Health and Aging: Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: United States Senate: The Honorable Michael B. Enzi: Ranking Member: Subcommittee on Children and Families: Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: United States Senate: The Honorable Johnny Isakson: Ranking Member: Subcommittee on Employment and Workplace Safety: Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: United States Senate: [End of section] Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: In this report, we examine the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief's (PEPFAR) (1) treatment program results and how the Department of State's (State) Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC) measures them and (2) assistance to improve partner countries' monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems. To address both of these objectives, we collected and analyzed information from the following sources: interviews and fieldwork; guidance documents and past GAO work; PEPFAR partnership frameworks, operational plans, and performance reports; and studies of treatment programs. We interviewed officials from OGAC, the Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in Washington, D.C., and Atlanta, Georgia. We also conducted fieldwork in three PEPFAR partner countries--Kenya, South Africa, and Uganda--in June 2012 to obtain information on PEPFAR efforts to support partner- country treatment program outcomes and quality as well as challenges faced by PEPFAR implementing agencies and stakeholders. We selected these countries based on program size, availability of cost data, travel logistics, and other factors. We interviewed U.S. agency officials, representatives of key implementing partners, and partner government health officials and conducted visits to selected treatment facilities in these countries. We reviewed guidance provided to PEPFAR country teams[Footnote 36] by OGAC in collaboration with CDC, USAID, and other PEPFAR implementing agencies and previous GAO work to identify criteria related to requirements for collecting, validating, and reporting treatment program results and their measures.[Footnote 37] These guidance documents also provided criteria for examining PEPFAR assistance to improve partner countries' M&E systems. Guidance documents included OGAC's 2010 Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide, issued in August 2009; fiscal years 2011 and 2012 operational plan guidance and associated technical considerations; and annual and semiannual performance reporting guidance. We also consulted relevant guidance and reports issued by international organizations such as the United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and the World Health Organization (WHO). These included Global Report: UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic, 2012 and Organizing Framework for a Functional National HIV Monitoring and Evaluation System as well as WHO's 2010 Antiretroviral Therapy for HIV Infection in Adults and Adolescents: Recommendation for a Public Health Approach and 2006 Patient Monitoring Guidelines for HIV Care and Antiretroviral Therapy. We also reviewed WHO's 2011 Retention in HIV Programmes: Defining the Challenges and Identifying Solutions. We examined PEPFAR operational plans, performance reports, and partnership frameworks. First, to identify key PEPFAR treatment program goals--including those related to treatment program supervision, M&E systems, and quality assurance--we reviewed partnership framework agreements between the United States and 22 PEPFAR partner countries and regions.[Footnote 38] Next, to identify ongoing and planned PEPFAR activities, as well as challenges, related to treatment programs and M&E systems, we reviewed relevant sections of PEPFAR operational plans for fiscal year 2012 for the 33 PEPFAR countries and three regions. We documented instances where the operational plans addressed these activities, and we summarized the information for all PEPFAR countries and regions. Finally, to identify PEPFAR treatment program results, as well as challenges associated with these program activities and PEPFAR assistance to improve partner countries' M&E systems, we reviewed PEPFAR semiannual and annual reports for fiscal years 2011 and 2012 submitted by PEPFAR country teams to OGAC as well as aggregate PEPFAR data provided to us by OGAC. In fiscal years 2011 and 2012, the 33 PEPFAR country and three regional teams provided semi-annual and annual reports to OGAC containing data and narrative descriptions of each country's or region's PEPFAR activities. We reviewed all PEPFAR countries' and regions' fiscal year 2011 annual reports to identify strengths and weaknesses of partner countries' M&E systems. In addition, the 23 PEPFAR country teams that provided direct support for treatment services reported PEPFAR treatment indicator data and narrative descriptions to OGAC regarding (1) the number of adults and children with advanced HIV infection who are currently receiving treatment directly supported by PEPFAR (PEPFAR direct number of people currently on treatment); (2) the percentage of adults and children with advanced HIV infection who are receiving treatment in partner countries' treatment programs (national coverage rates); and (3) the percentage of adults and children known to be alive and on treatment 12 months after starting treatment directly supported by PEPFAR (PEPFAR direct treatment retention rates). We reviewed and summarized the 23 country teams' narrative descriptions accompanying each of these three PEPFAR indicators for information related to treatment program results and assistance to improve PEPFAR partner countries' M&E systems. In the case of the number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR, to show changes over time, we analyzed aggregate data for fiscal years 2004 through 2012 provided by OGAC, which it derived from PEPFAR country teams' semi-annual and annual reports. We previously have reviewed OGAC guidance and procedures for collecting, analyzing, and assessing these data.[Footnote 39] In addition, to identify factors considered by PEPFAR country teams when reporting on PEPFAR treatment program results, we reviewed the narrative descriptions provided in these PEPFAR country teams' fiscal year 2011 annual reports. On the basis of these reviews, as well as interviews with OGAC officials, we determined that the PEPFAR data on number of people on treatment were sufficiently reliable for reporting totals rounded to the nearest hundred. In addition, to illustrate PEPFAR's contribution to the number of people on treatment in low-and middle- income countries, we obtained data on the numbers of people on treatment in all low-and middle-income countries from the UNAIDS website [hyperlink, http://www.unaids.org] for calendar years 2004 through 2011. UNAIDS sets international standards for these data, which it collects from national governments and uses to report on estimated numbers of people on treatment; therefore, we deemed them sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our reporting. Data on the number of people on treatment in low-and middle-income countries were not available for 2012 at the time of this report's publication. To be able to illustrate PEPFAR's contribution to the number of people on treatment in low-and middle-income countries in 2012, we derived a rough estimate based on changes in PEPFAR's and UNAIDS's reported numbers of people on treatment from 2010 to 2011. We observed that the number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR made up about half of the increase in the number of people on treatment in low- and middle-income countries in these years. For fiscal years 2011 to 2012, the number of people on treatment directly supported by PEPFAR increased by about 1.2 million; if we had assumed that this number continued to make up half of the increase in low-and middle- income countries in these years, the estimated increase would have been 2.4 million. Thus, our estimate of an increase of about 1.5 million people on treatment from 2011 to 2012--leading to an estimate of 9.5 million people on treatment in low-and middle-income countries in those years--represents a conservative projection of possible scenarios. In the case of partner countries' treatment coverage rates, we analyzed data provided in UNAIDS's 2012 Global Report: UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic as well as data available for 2009 through 2011 on UNAIDS's website [hyperlink, http://www.unaids.org]. UNAIDS sets international standards for these data, which it collects from national governments and uses to report on national treatment coverage rates. On the basis of review of treatment coverage rates reported by PEPFAR country teams to OGAC, as well as discussions with OGAC officials, we determined that UNAIDS's treatment coverage data were the most complete and current data available and were thus sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our reporting. In addition to information provided by PEPFAR country teams and reported by OGAC, we also drew on information from a selected set of studies of treatment programs and M&E systems in PEPFAR partner countries. We used the information from these studies to identify illustrative examples of factors affecting treatment program outcomes and M&E system strengths and weaknesses. Appendix III contains examples of information provided by studies we reviewed. First, although we did not intend to develop an exhaustive list of all available studies, we took a number of steps to identify relevant and up-to-date studies assessing treatment programs and M&E systems in PEPFAR countries. These studies included: (1) studies collected under our previous review of evaluations of PEPFAR programs; (2) studies provided by PEPFAR country teams in the three countries we visited; (3) articles published in special issues of Health Affairs and the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes dedicated to PEPFAR programs, both published in 2012; and (4) a citations review for PEPFAR public health evaluations, evaluations provided by CDC headquarters, and relevant articles appearing in Health Affairs and the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes from 2009 through 2012. We identified more than 200 studies addressing our objectives. To perform our review, we first reviewed the studies' titles and abstracts to categorize each study according to one or more topics, such as M&E systems or treatment program retention. Focusing on studies that fell into categories related to M&E systems and to treatment program retention and patient-level outcomes, we then reviewed key sections--such as findings and conclusions--of each study to identify common themes. We also targeted studies that addressed topics covered in the body of the report, such as factors affecting treatment program retention and loss to follow-up and strengths and weaknesses of M&E systems. Having identified subsets of relevant studies, we reviewed them in more depth to verify our initial judgments about the studies' findings and to select illustrative examples of the themes we had identified. This additional review included the development of narrative work papers synthesizing and categorizing more detailed findings and results from the selected studies. We then presented these findings and examples in appendix III. Our analysis is not a summary of the full set of studies we identified in the initial phase but rather a presentation of several key, high-level results derived from a select set of studies in both areas, supported with citations to illustrative studies. We conducted this performance audit from May 2012 to April 2013 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. [End of section] Appendix II: Criteria for Assessing PEPFAR Direct Support: The Department of State's (State) Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator's (OGAC) Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide, effective beginning in fiscal year 2010 and updated in February 2013, provides a list of indicators for setting targets, monitoring results, and reporting to OGAC. The guidance distinguishes between President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) direct indicators and national indicators. PEPFAR direct indicators describe the results of PEPFAR programs through its funded activities. National indicators describe the achievements of all contributors--including public and private sector organizations and other donors--to a partner country's HIV/AIDS programs. Furthermore, OGAC's guidance provides a checklist for determining whether a site-specific service supported by PEPFAR can be counted in reporting on PEPFAR direct indicators. According to the guidance, to be characterized as PEPFAR direct, an activity must fulfill at least one criterion in each of the two panels shown in table 5. If an activity meets at least one of each set of criteria, PEPFAR support is assumed to be direct and to likely provide sufficient support for claiming 100 percent of the site-specific results. If an activity meets a criterion in only one of the panels, PEPFAR support may be insufficient for claiming 100 percent of site-specific results. In that case, country teams must (1) determine whether there is sufficient justification to claim the results as direct and, if there is, (2) justify the method used to estimate the appropriate fraction of the total commensurate with PEPFAR support to the site and (3) document the estimation procedures used. Table 5: Checklist to Determine Whether to Count Service Delivery Support as PEPFAR Direct: Assessment criteria: Panel 1: Compared with other donors/partners, the dollar value that PEPFAR invests at the service delivery site is substantial; Panel 2: Quality prevention, care, and/or treatment services at the site(s) would not occur in the absence of PEPFAR support. Assessment criteria: Panel 1: PEPFAR has frequent (i.e., more than 1 day per week) contact with service delivery site personnel, patients, and/or clients; Panel 2: The quality of the services provided at the service delivery site(s) would be unacceptably low without PEPFAR support. Assessment criteria: Panel 1: PEPFAR staff regularly assists with essential M&E functions provided at the service delivery site; Panel 2: The support provided represents a substantial contribution toward sustainability of services at the service delivery site(s). Source: PEPFAR Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide, version 1.1, August 2009. [End of table] [End of section] Appendix III: Summary of Studies: In addition to analyzing information provided by President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) country teams and reported by the Department of State's (State) Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC), we also performed reviews of a selected set of studies.[Footnote 40] Although these studies may not represent national treatment program conditions and may be limited by incomplete data, they provide additional information related to treatment retention and patient-level health outcomes, as well as strengths and weaknesses of partner-country monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems. (See appendix I for information on how we identified and used these studies for the purposes of our reporting.) Treatment Retention and Patient-Level Outcomes: Treatment retention rates[Footnote 41] reported by PEPFAR country teams indicate some progress but have certain limitations related to data completeness and varying methods and definitions. Treatment program studies--which use treatment facility data not routinely reported by PEPFAR country teams to OGAC--also provide information about treatment retention, adherence, and patient loss-to-follow-up. [Footnote 42] Several studies, although not representative of national program conditions, identified factors associated with patient loss-to-follow- up, such as advanced illness and personal economics. They also noted measures that could potentially reduce the number of patients lost to follow-up and thus increase retention rates, such as starting treatment earlier, shortening the distance to health care facilities, expanding personal outreach by community health volunteers, and using mobile phone messaging for patient follow-up. In addition, several studies that we reviewed identified interventions found to be successful for reducing the occurrence of drug resistance and treatment failure, including (1) increased outreach to patients to increase adherence to medications and (2) effective supervision and training of lower-level health facility staff. Other studies identified factors that may limit the positive health effects of treatment, such as poor access to nutrition and clean water. Such findings can serve as the basis for adopting new treatment program policies and management approaches. Incomplete data may limit studies' ability to fully examine patient- level health outcomes and the factors that affect them. For example, we identified one study that reported some positive adult treatment program outcomes, based on a nationally representative sample of treatment facilities in Rwanda, but noted incomplete data on patient weight and CD4 cell count, among other limitations. Another study on the prevalence of drug-resistant HIV strains noted that very few published data on drug resistance are available, particularly for the HIV strains that tend to be prevalent in low-and middle-income countries. Devising mitigation strategies for drug resistance can be difficult without these data. Likewise, one study noted a lack of data on potential adverse effects of treatment on the growth and development of pediatric patients. Strengths and Weaknesses of Partner-Country M&E Systems: Studies of partner countries' M&E systems note that some progress has been made in expanding and upgrading these systems. The studies cite increased use of electronic systems for health information management and reporting. For example, one study found that electronic systems, where in use, enabled health facilities to report on health indicators more easily as well as to support patient and facility management. Nevertheless, these studies also found that partner countries' M&E systems are unable to produce timely and complete treatment data, thus limiting their usefulness for patient, clinic, or program management. These studies cited several challenges, including the following: * Human resource limitations can hinder the full use of M&E system data. For example, one study noted that health facility staff lacked trained data managers to regularly analyze basic data. * Data may not always be analyzed when reported from the facility to the district; and data may not always be disseminated properly, or may not be used in decision making. For example, one study noted limited access to data and lack of capacity as factors negatively affecting data use. * Health facility staff may prioritize data reporting to districts, national ministries, and donors over data use, including use for improving the quality of treatment services. For example, one study found that data were used for decision making at 38 percent of health facilities reviewed and in 44 percent of districts reviewed. [End of section] Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of State: United States Department of State: Comptroller: 1969 Dyess Avenue: Charleston, SC 29405: April 4, 2013: Dr. Loren Yager: Managing Director: International Affairs and Trade: Government Accountability Office: 441 G Street, NW: Washington, DC 20548: Dear Dr. Yager: We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Shift to Partner-Country Treatment Programs Will Require Better Information on Results" GAO Job Code 320913. The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report. If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact Leigh Ann Monk-Reyes, Program Support Officer, Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator at (202)663-2753. Sincerely, Signed by: James L. Millette: cc: GAO - David Gootnick; S/GAC- Eric Goosby; State/OIG - Evelyn Klemstine. Department of State Comments on GAO Draft Report: President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief: Shift to Partner-Country Treatment Programs Will Require Better Information on Results (GAO-13-460, GAO Code 320913): Thank you for the opportunity to comment on your draft report entitled, "President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief Shift to Partner- Country Treatment Programs Will Require Better Information on Results, GA0-13-360, Job Code 320913." The GAO report included three recommendations for the Department of State's Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator (S/GAC). The Department of State's Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator and the PEPFAR implementing agencies appreciate the work conducted by the GAO to produce these findings and the report. The PEPFAR program is committed to both improving the quality and the use of data to better manage programs, optimize impact, and capture PEPFAR's contribution to country HIV/AIDS treatment scaleup and outcomes. PEPFAR works in partnership with partner countries, the Global Fund for AIDS TB and Malaria, the WHO, UNAIDS and other stakeholders to achieve ambitious treatment goals within the framework of a country- owned health response. This requires that PEPFAR harmonize its efforts with international partner organizations and countries to support an effective monitoring and evaluation system that minimizes overlapping mandates and duplicative or burdensome data collection and reporting, respecting often constrained human and other resources to carry these out. First, GAO recommended that S/GAC develop a method that fully accounts for PEPFAR's contributions to partner-country treatment programs. PEPFAR is committed to supporting national programs and developing methods to better account for its contributions to partner-country treatment programs. We are supportive of GAO's recommendation that PEPFAR's contribution to treatment outcomes be accurately captured and reflective of the breadth of activities conducted by partners that result in successful treatment. The GAO report correctly notes that the currently used treatment indicator associated with service delivery does not fully account for PEPFAR's contributions to partner country treatment programs, as it was intended to only capture essential components of direct treatment services to individuals. PEPFAR has just initiated a process for revising its entire monitoring, evaluation, and reporting framework. A component of this effort is focused on expanding available indicators for documenting program activities, allowing partners to report on their work that supports district health service delivery supervision, mentoring, policy change, as well as institutional capacity building and additional activities that are structured to support sustainable treatment program development and implementation in partner countries. Currently, our standard indicators do not allow for complete documentation of the breadth of PEPFAR's technical support for treatment. These new measures will provide a more robust means to describe the nature of PEPFAR support, and will be a more realistic and useful method to measure the full extent of its contributions to national and global HIV treatment outcomes. This new framework and indicators, designed to support PEPFAR in the next phase of the initiative, will become available in the summer 2013. Second, GAO recommended that S/GAC establish a common set of indicators to measure the results of treatment program quality improvement efforts. As the report notes, PEPFAR does not have a formal PEPFAR-wide strategy on monitoring treatment quality although its implementing agencies engage in many activities to assure the quality of treatment programs, and in many cases have quality strategies and standards. For example, tracking performance through periodic site quality monitoring using standardized measurement tools, with remediation plans for areas needing improvement, is carried out by many PEPFAR programs providing HIV clinical services. Data quality assessments to validate site level data are also done on a sampling basis. As the PEPFAR program has matured and clinical responsibilities are increasingly transferred from international partners to local partners and governments, it is clear that a harmonized PEPFAR strategy on treatment quality is needed to assure and monitor quality of service delivery. As with treatment indicators, PEPFAR is committed to supporting, informing, and aligning with partner country strategies for monitoring treatment quality and effectiveness of measures to improve it. Other stakeholders, including the Global Fund, have shared interests and objectives in working with partner countries and PEPFAR towards a uniform country plan for quality standards. Earlier this year, S/GAC established a task team to develop a PEPFAR- wide quality strategy for clinical programs, including treatment and care. The task team is composed of S/GAC staff representing adult and pediatric treatment, care, and strategic information. The team is working with the PEPFAR Technical Working Groups and implementing agencies to develop a quality strategy for clinical programs, including the development and refinement of key indicators, standards which encompass quality assurance and improvement processes, and standardized protocols to ensure quality data that are fundamental to these measures. Expected deliverables in 2013 include a stand-alone clinical quality strategy document, updates to the PEPFAR Technical Considerations, Country Operational Plan guidance, and the new indicators guidance. Building the capacity of partner countries to design, implement, and support these efforts is a key objective of this agenda. In addition, given the critical importance of retention to quality treatment and care programs, the task team will also develop stand- alone guidance on retention, with tool-kits to help improve retention measurement, evaluation, and performance across PEPFAR. Measures of retention are relatively new and complex to operationalize in the context of evolving data management systems, decentralization of PEPFAR-supported services across public and private sector providers, and as the management and oversight functions for treatment support transition to partner countries. The forthcoming guidance and toolkits aim to allow PEPFAR and partner countries to achieve the greatest impact of investments in care and treatment by tracking retention and identifying when program adjustments are needed to optimize this. This work is linked closely with support for national M&E systems, as noted below. Retention, as well as many other outcome measures, is heavily dependent on data systems, and until these systems are comprehensive and fully implemented, PEPFAR is supporting development of representative sampling strategies to provide quality information on retention (and other outcome) tracking. Third, GAO recommended that S/GAC establish a set of minimum standards for data generated by partner countries' M&E systems. PEPFAR supports the development and strengthening of partner country reporting systems, but does not independently create standards for those systems. Instead, consistent with PEPFAR's emphasis on country ownership, PEPFAR works with our national partners to help them develop robust systems to support the national agenda as well as to provide data for PEPFAR and other donor entities. A related indicator for use in countries documents data completeness and timeliness among the collection of measures published by the WHO for Health Systems Strengthening This or a comparable measure can be used by the national system to monitor the success of our collaborative efforts. One step PEPFAR is taking is to ensure that M&E systems used by host countries and those used within the PEPFAR program incorporate the flexibility needed to accommodate each other's reporting timeframe. This activity is specifically designed to address current issues in the non-alignment of USG and host country reporting periods that contributes to the 'timeliness' concerns. In addition, while PEPFAR believes national ownership is essential, PEPFAR also has been a major catalyst in system standardization among our partner countries for the last several years, which should help ensure that certain minimum standards for data quality are met. Toward this end, we have supported the WHO's efforts to develop consensus for and publish international standards for data exchange. At an implementation level, PEPFAR has been the primary sponsor of the Open Health Information Exchange (OpenHIE) initiative, founded on the principles of standards-based open source and interoperability. Applications range from client-focused systems found in health clinics to population-focused systems providing aggregated data for management, performance, and public health objectives. The link between these two types of systems is critical to aggregate and move data among the various administrative levels for analyses. PEPFAR is currently working with the Global Fund to support the implementation of the District Health Information Software (DHIS) system, the system of choice for many of our partner countries, to manage aggregate data for national, PEPFAR, Global Fund, and other donor reporting. We anticipate that this capability will expand rapidly across countries over the next five years, and greatly increase the capacity of our partner countries to support the use and reporting of quality data. [End of section] Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: GAO Contacts: David Gootnick, (202) 512-3149 or gootnickd@gao.gov: Marcia Crosse, (202) 512-7114 or crossem@gao.gov: Staff Acknowledgments: In addition to the contacts named above, Jim Michels (Assistant Director), Todd M. Anderson, David Dayton, Brian Hackney, and Grace Lui made key contributions to this report. In addition, the following GAO staff provided technical assistance and other support: Sada Aksartova, Chad Davenport, David Dornisch, Lorraine Ettaro, Katherine Forsyth, Kay Halpern, Erika Navarro, and Jane Whipple. [End of section] Related GAO Products: President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Per-Patient Costs Have Declined Substantially, but Better Cost Data Would Help Efforts to Expand Treatment. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-345]. Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2013. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Agencies Can Enhance Evaluation Quality, Planning, and Dissemination. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-12-673]. Washington, D.C.: May 31, 2012. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Program Planning and Reporting. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-785]. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2011. Global Health: Trends in U.S. Spending for Global HIV/AIDS and Other Health Assistance in Fiscal Years 2001-2008. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-64]. Washington, D.C.: October 8, 2010. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Efforts to Align Programs with Partner Countries' HIV/AIDS Strategies and Promote Partner Country Ownership. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-836]. Washington, D.C.: September 20, 2010. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Partner Selection and Oversight Follow Accepted Practices but Would Benefit from Enhanced Planning and Accountability. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-666]. Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2009. Global HIV/AIDS: A More Country-Based Approach Could Improve Allocation of PEPFAR Funding. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-480]. Washington, D.C.: April 2, 2008. Global Health: Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria Has Improved Its Documentation of Funding Decisions but Needs Standardized Oversight Expectations and Assessments. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-627]. Washington, D.C.: May 7, 2007. Global Health: Spending Requirement Presents Challenges for Allocating Prevention Funding under the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-395]. Washington, D.C.: April 4, 2006. Global Health: The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria Is Responding to Challenges but Needs Better Information and Documentation for Performance-Based Funding. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-639]. Washington, D.C.: June 10, 2005. Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic: Selection of Antiretroviral Medications Provided under U.S. Emergency Plan Is Limited. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-133]. Washington, D.C.: January 11, 2005. Global Health: U.S. AIDS Coordinator Addressing Some Key Challenges to Expanding Treatment, but Others Remain. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-784]. Washington, D.C.: June 12, 2004. Global Health: Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria Has Advanced in Key Areas, but Difficult Challenges Remain. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-601]. Washington, D.C.: May 7, 2003. [End of section] Footnotes: [1] Congress first authorized PEPFAR in 2003. Pub. L. No. 108-25, § 401, 117 Stat. 711, 745. [2] In this report, "treatment" refers to the services delivered to HIV-positive people who are receiving treatment with antiretroviral (ARV) drugs. "Care and treatment" refers to treatment plus a set of additional services provided to improve the quality of life for HIV- infected people, including clinical, psychological, spiritual, social, and prevention services. [3] See UNAIDS, UNAIDS 2012 Global Report: UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic (Geneva, Switzerland: 2012). See also WHO, The Strategic Use of Antiretrovirals to Help End the HIV Epidemic (Geneva, Switzerland: 2012). [4] Pub. L. No. 110-293, 122 Stat. 2918. [5] For fiscal years 2009 through 2012, State, USAID, and HHS (CDC and the National Institutes of Health) allocated the following amounts for global HIV/AIDS programs: $6.5 billion, $6.6 billion, $6.5 billion, and $6.4 billion, respectively. For fiscal year 2013, these agencies requested $6.2 billion for global HIV/AIDS programs. Amounts include U.S. contributions to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. [6] See GAO, President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Per-Patient Costs Have Declined Substantially, but Better Cost Data Would Help Efforts to Expand Treatment, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-345] (Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2013). [7] In this report, "studies" refers to evaluations, assessments, and other studies of treatment programs and M&E systems in PEPFAR partner countries. [8] Other PEPFAR implementing agencies are the Departments of State, Defense, Labor, and Commerce and the Peace Corps. Additional HHS offices and agencies involved in PEPFAR implementation are the Office of Global Affairs, the Food and Drug Administration, the Health Resources and Services Administration, the National Institutes of Health, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. [9] In this report, "PEPFAR country teams" refers to PEPFAR country and regional teams and their implementing partners collectively. PEPFAR implementing agencies obtain services for PEPFAR activities through grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts with selected implementing partners. These partners include U.S.-based nongovernmental organizations and host-country governmental and nongovernmental organizations. For more information, see GAO, President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Partner Selection and Oversight Follow Accepted Practices but Would Benefit from Enhanced Planning and Accountability, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-666] (Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2009). [10] The 33 countries were Angola, Botswana, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, China, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guyana, Haiti, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Russia, Rwanda, South Africa, South Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda, Ukraine, Vietnam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The three regions were the Caribbean, Central America, and Central Asia. [11] Pub. L. No. 110-293, § 301(c)(6). [12] According to OGAC guidance, partnership frameworks and their associated partnership framework implementation plans are not intended to be legally binding. Rather, they are intended as nonbinding joint strategic-planning documents that outline the collaborative relationship between the U.S. government and partner countries and reflect overarching 5-year goals and the commitments of each party. See U.S. Department of State, Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, Guidance for PEPFAR Partnership Frameworks and Partnership Framework Implementation Plans, Version 2.0 (Sept. 14, 2009), accessed January 28, 2013, [hyperlink, http://www.pepfar.gov/documents/organization/120510.pdf]. [13] As of February 2013, partnership frameworks had been signed with the following 22 partner countries and regions: Angola, Botswana, the Caribbean region, the Central American region, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Ukraine, Vietnam, and Zambia. [14] U.S. Department of State, Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, PEPFAR Blueprint: Creating an AIDS-free Generation (Washington, D.C.: November 2012). [15] This is typically measured by CD4 (cluster of differentiation antigen 4) count in a sample of blood. CD4 cells are a type of white blood cell that fights infection. Along with other tests, the CD4 count helps determine the strength of the immune system, indicates the stage of the HIV disease, guides treatment, and predicts the disease's progress. [16] WHO recommended treatment for all people with CD4 counts of less than 350 cells/mm3. Prior to 2010, WHO's guidelines recommended treatment for all people with CD4 counts of less than 200 cells/mm3. Normal CD4 counts range from 500-1,000 cells/mm3. [17] In some cases, this may be done through laboratory assessments of the severity of the patient's HIV infection, as measured by viral load. Viral load is a measure of the severity of a viral infection and can be calculated by estimating the amount of virus in an involved body fluid. [18] See GAO, President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Program Planning and Reporting, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-785] (Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2011). [19] Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, Next Generation Indicators Reference Guide: Planning and Reporting, Version 1.1 (August 2009), accessed March 20, 2013, [hyperlink, http://www.pepfar.gov/documents/organization/81097.pdf. The guidance went into effect for the fiscal year 2010 planning and reporting cycle and was updated in February 2013. [20] According to OGAC, 23 PEPFAR country teams provided direct support for treatment services in fiscal years 2011 and 2012: Botswana, Cambodia, China, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Guyana, Haiti, India, Kenya, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. OGAC provides guidance to country teams for determining whether people receive direct services through PEPFAR implementing partners. See appendix II for more information. [21] OGAC also requires PEPFAR country teams to collect and maintain data on two additional treatment-related indicators: (1) percentage of health facilities offering treatment services and (2) percentage of health facilities providing treatment services using CD4 monitoring in line with national guidelines, on site, or through referral. These data are not reported to OGAC. [22] These requirements include a plan to increase the number of people receiving treatment, annual reporting requirements, and PEPFAR's annual treatment target. Pub. L. No. 110-293, §§ 101, 301, 403. [23] In addition to tracking the number of people currently on treatment, in fiscal year 2010, OGAC also began tracking the number of people newly enrolled in treatment that is directly provided by PEPFAR. Data reported for this indicator--which OGAC disaggregates by age, sex, and pregnancy status for women--provide additional information on treatment program expansion and links treatment programs to special efforts aimed at preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV. [24] PEPFAR country teams also report data disaggregated by age, sex, and pregnancy status for women. [25] In December 2011, the President announced an increase in PEPFAR's 5-year target for the number of people receiving treatment supported directly by PEPFAR--from 4 million to 6 million by the end of fiscal year 2013. [26] The number of people on treatment directly provided by PEPFAR includes an estimate of the results of treatment programs supported by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund). To estimate the overlap, OGAC and the Global Fund together analyze available treatment program data, taking into account the contribution each makes to partner countries' treatment programs to determine likely overlap. For example, for fiscal year 2010, OGAC reported that PEPFAR had directly provided treatment for about 3.2 million people, which includes an estimated overlap with the Global Fund of about 1.5 million. [27] A recent version of the guidance, dated February 2013, does not include this statement. In its technical comments, OGAC indicated that this statement reflected initial thinking about alternative methods for representing PEPFAR's contributions to partner countries' HIV/AIDS programs. [28] This percentage is calculated by dividing the number of adults and children currently receiving treatment by an estimate (typically derived from epidemiological data and modeling) of the number of adults and children eligible to receive treatment (i.e., those with advanced HIV infection). Population coverage indicators generally depict regional or national program results and are to be disaggregated by age and sex. [29] The most recent available information on national treatment coverage are from UNAIDS. We consulted UNAIDS's most recent report on the global AIDS epidemic and cross-referenced this information with national treatment coverage data available on the UNAIDS website as well data in PEPFAR country teams' fiscal year 2011 annual reports to OGAC. Data on China's 2011 national coverage rate were not available from UNAIDS. In its fiscal year 2011 report to OGAC, the PEPFAR country team provided information on China's 2010 national treatment coverage rate, which we used for this report. [30] Each country sets its own targets for national treatment coverage rates. According to UNAIDS, most countries have set 80 percent as their target for treatment coverage. [31] See World Health Organization, Retention in HIV Programmes: Defining the Challenges and Identifying Solutions (Geneva, Switzerland: 2011). [32] Patient monitoring is the routine collection, compilation, and analysis of patient data over time and across service delivery points, using information from paper forms or entered into a computer. Patient management--also referred to as clinical management or clinical monitoring--is the relationship between health providers and patients over time, assisted by written records. [33] The process of routinely tracking information about a program and its outcomes is referred to as program monitoring. Program monitoring at facility, district, and national levels requires many types of information, including aggregated patient data. [34] As of March 2013, partnership frameworks had been signed with the following 22 partner countries and regions: Angola, Botswana, Caribbean region, Central American region, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Ukraine, Vietnam, and Zambia. [35] In addition, OGAC technical guidance cites an assessment tool established by UNAIDS, with PEPFAR support, which partner countries can use to develop their M&E systems for HIV/AIDS programs. See UNAIDS, Organizing Framework for a Functional National HIV Monitoring and Evaluation System (Geneva: April 2008). [36] In this report, "PEPFAR country teams" refers to PEPFAR country and regional teams and their implementing partners collectively. [37] GAO, Tax Administration: IRS Needs to Further Refine Its Tax Filing Season Performance Measures, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-143] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 22, 2002). [38] As of February 2013, the United States had signed partnership frameworks with the following 22 partner countries and regions: Angola, Botswana, the Caribbean region, the Central American region, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Ukraine, Vietnam, and Zambia. [39] See GAO, President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: Program Planning and Reporting, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-785] (Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2011). [40] In this report, "studies" refers to evaluations, assessments, and other studies of treatment programs and M&E systems in PEPFAR countries. [41] OGAC defines treatment retention as the percentage of adults and children known to be alive and on treatment 12 months after treatment initiation. [42] Patient loss-to-follow-up is defined as patients with unknown treatment outcomes, including possible death, treatment cessation, or self-transfer to another treatment facility. [End of section] GAO’s Mission: The Government Accountability Office, the audit, evaluation, and investigative arm of Congress, exists to support Congress in meeting its constitutional responsibilities and to help improve the performance and accountability of the federal government for the American people. GAO examines the use of public funds; evaluates federal programs and policies; and provides analyses, recommendations, and other assistance to help Congress make informed oversight, policy, and funding decisions. GAO’s commitment to good government is reflected in its core values of accountability, integrity, and reliability. 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