4.5 Article

Diplomatic advantages and threats in global health program selection, design, delivery and implementation: development and application of the Kevany Riposte

Journal

GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12992-015-0108-x

Keywords

Global health diplomacy; foreign policy; PEPFAR; HIV/AIDS; the Global Fund to Fight AIDS; Tuberculosis and Malaria; 'smart power'

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Background: Global health programs, as supported by organizations such as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), stand to make significant contributions to international medical outcomes. Traditional systems of monitoring and evaluation, however, fail to capture downstream, indirect, or collateral advantages (and threats) of intervention selection, design, and implementation from broader donor perspectives, including those of the diplomatic and foreign policy communities, which these programs also generate. This paper describes the development a new metier under which assessment systems designed to consider the diplomatic value of global health initiatives are described and applied based on previously-identified Top Ten criteria. Methods: The Kevany Riposte and the K-Score were conceptualized based on a retrospective and collective assessment of the author's participation in the design, implementation and delivery of a range of global health interventions related to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Responses and associated scores reframe intervention worth or value in terms of global health diplomacy criteria such as adaptability, interdependence, training, and neutrality. Response options ranged from highly advantageous to significant potential threat. Results: Global health initiatives under review were found to generate significant advantages from the diplomatic perspective. These included (1) intervention visibility and associations with donor altruism and prestige, (2) development of international non-health collaborations and partnerships, (3) adaptability and responsiveness of service delivery to local needs, and (4) advancement of broader strategic goals of the international community. Corresponding threats included (1) an absence of formal training of project staff on broader political and international relations roles and responsibilities, (2) challenges to recipient cultural and religious practices, (3) intervention-related environmental concerns, and (4) a lack of prima facie consideration of intervention diplomatic and foreign policy consequences. Conclusions: Global health interventions stand to generate significant diplomatic advantages for donor and recipient countries and organizations when appropriately selected, designed, targeted, and delivered. Conversely, in the absence of the application of standards such as those developed under the Kevany Riposte, threats to diplomacy and international relations may occur. With the application of related systems to other global health programmes and settings, comparative results on the relative worth of alternate approaches from the diplomatic perspective may be generated to better inform political, strategic, and global health policy and programmatic decisions.

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