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CHGA Interactive: Ghana

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Pamela C. Bowen. Founder, Chair and CEO - A5 Coalition. HIV/AIDS and the African Business: ... Pamela C. Bowen. A5 Coalition. Thank You. For more information contact: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CHGA Interactive: Ghana


1
HIV/AIDS and the African BusinessIssues and
Challenges
  • Pamela C. Bowen
  • Founder, Chair and CEO - A5 Coalition

2
Challenges to the PS Response
Attitudes
Knowledge
Africas Challenges
Inherent Challenges
3
The A5 and WAPSAN Experience
  • Since 2002 A5 has helped companies develop
    workplace programmes including Nestle, Guinness,
    Stanbic Bank, Accra Brewery, Phyto-Riker
    Pharmaceutical and Westel
  • A5 met with dozens of business leaders to
    encourage the formation of HIV/AIDS policies and
    workplace programmes

4
The A5 and WAPSAN Experience
  • A5 partnered with the GBC to leverage
    international best practices in Ghana
  • Collaborated with GEA and private sector to host
    executive training
  • Efforts to scale-up response was met with much
    resistance and uptake was low

5
Attitudes is a key stumbling block
  • Perceptions we encountered
  • HIV/AIDS is a public health issue
  • The disease is an issue for the country, perhaps
    the sector, but not viewed as a problem at the
    enterprise level (refer to GEA survey)
  • Belief that other companies are NOT undertaking
    programmes
  • General apathy about the welfare of workers
    deemed disposable and/or easily replaceable
  • Some employers do not appear to value their
    workers
  • Lack of leadership/management commitment
  • Profit motive, not necessarily socially conscious

6
Ignorance fuels inaction
  • Lack of knowledge perpetuates attitudes
  • Lack of information about the disease and its
    impact at the enterprise, sector and
    macro-economic levels
  • Leaderships limited definition of a workplace
    programme leads many to believe they have
    implemented interventions
  • Little or no private sector health surveillance
    to know the impact at the enterprise level
  • Little knowledge sharing among companies of
    losses or related costs

Knowledge
7
There are practical limits for the PS
  • PS has expressed key challenges to action
  • Outside core competency
  • Lack of an enabling environment
  • Lack of resources/inability to access support
  • Absence of sound Policy and tools for ME
  • SMEs and Informal sector challenges
  • Private and public sector partnership limitations
  • Difference in core ideology
  • Difference in approach to challenges

Inherent Challenges
8
African businesses have unique challenges
  • Paradigm of African business leaders is
    influenced by harsh realities
  • Business survival is not guaranteed. Many
    struggle to be profitable and competitive
  • Most enterprises are small, with fewer than 5
    employees
  • Short-term view driven by environment
  • Political instability
  • Economic instability

Africas Challenges
9
Responding to the challenge
  • In 2003 A5 determined more advocacy was necessary
    to scale up the response of the private sector.
    Focus shifted beyond Ghana to West Africa
    (ECOWAS) region
  • With support from ILO, UNAIDS and the private
    sector a consultative meeting was held which
    brought together 93 delegates from 12 countries
    to explore the possibility of forming the WAPSAN
    West Africa Private Sector AIDS Network.

10
Input from diverse stakeholders
  • Private sector, public sector, employer orgs,
    employee representative groups, associations of
    PLWHA and international agencies
  • Participants included Coca Cola, Ashanti
    Goldfields, Nestle, Unilever, Standard Chartered
    Bank, ILO, UNAIDS, FHI, GTZ, Care International,
    NACPs and others.

11
Input from diverse stakeholders
  • Supported the formation of the WAPSAN
  • Distinct working groups developed
    multi-dimensional multi-year strategy
  • Encouraged advocacy
  • Recommended more public-private partnerships
  • Believed a unified voice was necessary to lobby
    for an enabling environment in the sub-region
  • Believed more efforts should be put into resource
    mobilization, capacity building, knowledge
    sharing and harmonizing efforts

12
Recommendations - Advocacy
  • The A5 and WAPSAN experience reveals business
    leaders must be role models to encourage their
    peers to take up programmes and remove the idea
    that HIV is only a public health issue.
  • There is still more ground to be covered in the
    area of advocacy
  • Best practices around effective advocacy efforts
    should be shared

13
Recommendations Public/Private Partnerships
  • More public-private partnerships are needed to
    optimize scarce resources
  • Practical challenges of efforts to forge
    public-private partnerships reveals the need to
    structure initiatives that are more practical and
    less burdensome for the private sector
  • A paradigm shift is needed to arrive at common
    ground

14
Recommendations Enabling Environment
  • NACPs should clearly define the role of the
    private sector in NSF (national strategic
    framework). Education campaigns should also
    communicate the impact of HIV/AIDS on the private
    sector to remove public health stigma associated
    with HIV/AIDS and encourage shareholder buy-in
  • Advocacy should encourage national policies,
    which will serve as a guide for the PS

15
Recommendations Resource Mobilization/Capacity
Building
  • Sustainability will require pooling and
    optimizing the use of scarce resources
  • Resources of various stakeholder groups should be
    combined to enhance collective benefit and build
    capacity
  • As programs evolve capacity must be built to meet
    demand, particularly with regard to care and
    support programmes for PLWHA

16
Other Recommendations Demystify the disease
  • It is widely accepted that HIV/AIDS will have
    grave consequences for Africa
  • However, practically we must remove the fear and
    stigma which discourage voluntary testing and
    corporate action
  • We must demystify HIV/AIDS at the enterprise
    level they way we have with malaria, diabetes and
    hypertension

17
Other Recommendations Leverage Lessons Learned
  • We have a unique opportunity
  • Many programmes have been implemented
  • Some successes have been documented
  • Critical assessments must be undertaken to gauge
    the efficacy of existing approaches as we move
    forward into more comprehensive and sophisticated
    initiatives
  • Information needs to be made available to the PS
    to enable swift, and decisive action

18
Closing Remarks
  • The paradigm of the private sector
    fundamentally differs from that of the public
    sector. The private sector must necessarily have
    a keen focus on profitability, competitiveness
    and survival we must speak the language of the
    private sector in order to co-author new and
    innovative next generation interventions
  • Pamela C. Bowen
  • A5 Coalition

19
Thank You
  • For more information contact
  • Pamela Bowen Chair and CEO, A5 Coalition
  • pbowen_at_a5coalition.org
  • 233 21 701 1867
  • 233 27 741 5400
  • Marius Ziedou A5 Policy Officer, WASPAN
    Coordinator
  • mziedou_at_a5coalition.org
  • 233 27 745 7880
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