Browse Health Policy Project (2010-2016) Materials
- Advocacy
- Best Practices
- Capacity Development
- Child Protection
- Civil Society Engagement
- Contraceptive Security
- Costed Implementation Plan
- Costing
- Demographic Dividend
- Efficiency & Effectiveness
- Equity
- Family Planning/Reproductive Health
- FP2020
- Gender
- Gender-based Violence
- GeoHealth Mapping
- Governance, Stewardship & Accountability
- Health Financing
- Health Systems Strengthening
- HIV
- ImpactNow
- Integration
- Leadership
- Malaria
- Maternal Health
- Men having Sex with Men
- Millennium Development Goals
- Modeling
- Monitoring & Evaluation
- Non-Government/Community Service Org.
- OneHealth
- Orphans and Vulnerable Children
- Other Health Domains
- Parliamentarians
- People Living With HIV
- People who Inject Drugs
- Policy
- Private Sector
- RAPID
- Religious Leaders/FBOs
- Repositioning Family Planning
- Scale-up
- Sex Workers
- Spectrum
- Stakeholder Engagement
- Stigma and Discrimination
- Sustainable Financing
- Transgender
- Universal Health Coverage
- Urban and Rural Poor
- Women
- Youth
- GAP Tool
- MDG Briefs
- Nigeria Health Financing Conference
- Nigeria RAPID
- Respectful Maternity Care
- Stigma Package
- Ghana RAPID
- OCA Suite of Tools
- CIP Resource Kit
- Central Asian Republics
- Côte d'Ivoire
- Dominican Republic
- E&E
- Ethiopia
- Ghana
- Global
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- India
- Jamaica
- Jordan
- Kenya
- LAC
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Mali
- Mozambique
- Nepal
- Nigeria
- Russia
- South Africa
- Tanzania
- Uganda
- Ukraine
- West Africa
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
Country and regional assignments reflect those made at the time of production and may not correspond to current USAID designations.
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List entries are alphabetical by title and contain the title, abstract, and then the filename which is hyperlinked and will open in a new browser window. Most files are PDFs. There may be multiple files per abstract.
Specific
The Health Policy Project's final costing study entitled Estimating the Unit Cost of Providing a Minimum Package of HIV Services to Female Sex Workers and Men Who Have Sex with Men, provides useful information for national program planners, donors, and other stakeholders.It does now, however, include operational details on how these different stakeholders can use the study results for their individual planning, budgeting, and resource mobilization and/or allocation purposes. This companion guide provides details on how study results may be used to inform decision making at multiple levels.
- 235_CdICostingDataUseGuideEnglish.pdf 483.94 kb