A public policy approach to local models of HIV/AIDS control in Brazil
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American Journal of Public Health
Abstract
We investigated involvement and cooperation patterns of local
Brazilian AIDS program actors and the consequences of these patterns for
program implementation and sustainability.
Methods. We performed a public policy analysis (documentary analysis, direct
observation, semistructured interviews of health service and nongovernmental
organization [NGO] actors) in 5 towns in 2 states, Sa˜o Paulo and Para´ .
Results. Patterns suggested 3 models. In model 1, local government, NGOs,
and primary health care services were involved in AIDS programs with satisfac tory response to new epidemiological trends but a risk that HIV/AIDS would
become low priority. In model 2, mainly because of NGO activism, HIV/AIDS
remained an exceptional issue, with limited responses to new epidemiological
trends and program sustainability undermined by political instability. In model
3, involvement of public agencies and NGOs was limited, with inadequate
response to epidemiological trends and poor mobilization threatening program
sustainability.
Conclusions. Within a common national AIDS policy framework, the degree of
involvement and cooperation between public and NGO actors deeply impacts
population coverage and program sustainability. Specific processes are required
to maintain actor mobilization without isolating AIDS programs.
Description
p. 1108-1115,: tab. p&b.
Citation
LE LOUP, Guillaume et al. A public policy approach to local models of HIV/AIDS control in Brazil. American Journal of Public Health, v. 99, p. 1108-1115, 2009.