The Uganda AIDS Accountability Scorecard, the first
of its kind in the country was launched on Wednesday April 30th by the Uganda
Network of AIDS Service Organisations (UNASO) at Hotel Africana, in Kampala.
The Uganda AIDS Accountability Score card which was
produced by the Uganda Network of AIDS Services Organisations (UNASO) with
support of United Nations Development Programme(UNDP) rates the degree to which
the Government of Uganda is fulfilling its commitment to respond to the AIDS
epidemic.
Presenting the findings of the Scorecard, the
Executive Director of UNASO, Mr. Bharam Namanya, said that the study shows that
anti-retroviral therapy (ART) for both adults and children was performing well
as well as tuberculosis (TB) treatment.
He said that the number of Ugandans accessing
Anti-Retroviral treatment increased from 329,060 (57 per) to 577,000 (76.5 per
cent) between September 2011 and September 2013.
“Findings also reveal that the majority of
respondents are happy with the performance of other interventions; Prevention
of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT), HIV Counseling and Testing (HCT), and
Safe Male Circumcision (SMC).”
Mr. Namanya noted that the findings indicate that
most health facilities had infrastructure however, they had not had any renovation
and required facelift for they were generally characterized by worn out
paintings, dust stained louvers, dirt stained and damaged screening meshes,
stained and damaged ceilings, damaged doors, cracked walls, non-functional
water taps.The study also highlighted that the general challenges for prevention indicated that stigma is still limiting identified HIV positive clients from accessing treatment and there is shortage of midwives in supported lower level facilities especially among health centres III.
Uganda AIDS Commission (UAC) Board Chairperson, Professor Vinand Nantulya, described the scorecard as, “an opportunity to improve service delivery and offers a platform for communication between health service users and the service providers. It underscores immediate response and joint decision-making”.
Eight key elements required for an effective national response to AIDS were assessed, namely: Data Collection, Focus on Most-at-Risk Populations, Treatment, Prevention, Coordination, Civil Society, Financing and Human Rights Mainstreaming based on the performance indicators of Uganda’s National HIV and AIDS Strategic Plan 2011/12-2014/15.
Also at the launch, UNASO flagged off a new Accountability Framework for AIDS Service Organisations in Uganda, a tool aimed at helping CSOs to enhance internal accountability, governance and transparency to build capacity to support the HIV and AIDS sector in Uganda.
An estimated 1.3 million Ugandans aged 15 to 49 are currently living with HIV and prevalence has continued to rise from 6.4 per cent in 2004/2005 to 7.3 per cent in 2011.
UNASO, with a membership of over 2,000 CSOs, provides a platform for advocacy, coordination, networking, capacity building and information sharing among civil society AIDS service organizations (ASOs) to improve on the effectiveness, efficiency and quality of service delivery in Uganda.
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