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Global Fund updated NFM4 technical support request form

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has created a separate track of technical support available to communities to prepare national applications for Global Fund grants under the new funding cycle.   Preparations are underway for the Global Fund’s Seventh Replenishment, covering 2023–2025. It is expected that at the end of this year, countries will begin to receive official letters from the Global Fund informing them of the funding available for the control of the three diseases in the next allocation period, and they will apply for new grant funding starting in March 2023. In this regard, the Global Fund, as part of the technical support component of its Strategic Initiative on Community Engagement (formerly known as the Strategic Initiative on Communities, Rights, and Gender), has created a separate technical support track (TS) to ensure the deepest possible participation of civil society representatives in the preparation of national grant applications.   The following areas of TS provision are the priority areas within this track:   Area A. Situational analysis and needs assessment A.1 Evaluating the problems associated with OST to develop a funding request under the NMF4 A.2 Evaluating the program within NMF3 to develop a request for funding under the NMF4   Area B. Participation in the country dialogue process B.1 Consultation(s) with the community to prioritize funding requests under the NMF4 B.2 Coordinate participation in developing Global Fund-related documents (e.g., request for funding or documents required to award a grant)   Area C. Support for developing mechanisms and conditions for programs implementation C.1 Assistance in calculating costs To receive this technical support, interested representatives of civil society, including communities, from countries in the EECA region that meet the Global Fund’s eligibility criteria to receive funding for HIV and/or TB should:   – Clarify with the Country Coordinating Committee when your country plans to apply for new funding from the Global Fund (if in 2023, clarify the submission window) – Contact the EECA Regional Platform for assistance in the preparation of the TS request – Select the track(s) and areas of TS provision most relevant for your planning purposes within NFM4 – When filling in the request form — follow the prompts in red font on how to fill the form (for example, “indicate the organizations/networks involved,” “submit a detailed calculation of the costs of holding workshops and collecting data”) – Submit a request for TS at least 6 months before the country’s NFM4 funding request window Updated technical support request form in Russian and English: CRG Technical Assistance Request Form Technical support request form concerning OST   Recording of the webinar on this area of Global Fund technical support and the presentation “Short-term technical assistance within the framework of NFM4”:

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Help that can’t wait

From the beginning of April 2022, the project “Emergency response in connection with the war to support internally displaced people within Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees abroad amongst the representatives of key populations and PLHIV” (Help Now Hub) is ongoing. On February 24, 2022, russia began a devastating attack on Ukraine. During the next weeks, the escalation of the war forced millions to flee their homes in search of shelters and help. According to* Filippo Grandi, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, as of March 31, 5 weeks after the russian attack began, the number of Ukrainian refugees abroad had reached 4 million. 6.5 million Ukrainians have become internally displaced people. And as hostilities continue, those numbers could rise. Among the refugees are certainly representatives of key groups** of the “Emergency response in connection with the war to support internally displaced people within Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees abroad amongst the representatives of key populations and PLHIV” Project (Emergency Response, Regional Project SoS 2.0 supported by the Global Fund) led by the Alliance for Public Health and launched in April 2022. The main goal of this project is to provide support and assistance to Ukrainian refugees from key population groups moving to other countries and within Ukraine over the next 3 months, including access to information resources, navigation of needs and connection to relevant services related to the provision of appropriate treatment (ART, OST, anti-tuberculosis drugs, etc.). The key areas of work are: – Information support (preparing and dissemination of information materials about contacts, testing, counseling, adherence to treatment, use of services, support and development of the #HelpNow online service); – Support navigation and coordination (rapid assessment of existing services, resources and opportunities provided and available to refugees from Ukraine, including access to important services related to HIV / drug use / hepatitis, as well as more general social and life support) and identifying key gaps. Also, planning work in the country and abroad based on the results of this assessment (information support, creation of additional opportunities for social support, legal support, including relevant procurement and process management); – Immediate social (humanitarian) support, based on a rapid assessment of the situation to address certain gaps, on a case-by-case basis, for additional support or management of forwarding among existing relevant services. “It is very difficult to predict what figures we will see among refugees and internally displaced people in a month or three, given the activity of hostilities and the likelihood of a “second wave”. But the project team clearly aims at continuous and appropriate support for every representative of vulnerable groups who will turn to us for help.” – comments Vlasta Brodska, Director of Alliance Consulting, Project Director. “Many people are already familiar with the work of our #HelpNow service, which started almost from the beginning of the war. And we are glad to inform you that more than 700 appeals have been successfully coordinated since its launch. We are currently working on the development of all areas of the project, first of all – the launch of a navigation center (hub) to regulate major activities in close cooperation with our partners in the countries where most Ukrainian refugees are currently – Poland and Germany***.” Also, the planned activities of the project include organizing and systematizing information on available support to various organizations and government agencies in countries hosting Ukrainian refugees, providing technical assistance, including the development of alternative communication and coordination channels, online consultations on doctors (“telemedicine”) and further development of the complex HelpNow service. “Analyzing the existing and potential needs of key vulnerable groups among migrants in host countries, it is worth looking at the situation in more detail. Therefore, the emphasis in the project is not only on the information component, but also on humanitarian aid and the development of shelters for migrants in two regions of Ukraine – Kyiv and Ivano-Frankivsk. Also, in the future we plan to create special emergency funds to cover the needs of Ukrainian migrants.” – adds Vlasta Brodska. * – https://twitter.com/FilippoGrandi/status/1509088339017834504 ** – HIV+, PWUD, MSM, etc. *** – According to the Polish Border Guard Service, more than 2.4 million Ukrainians have crossed or moved to Poland. In Germany – 295 thousand refugees from Ukraine (according to the Federal Ministry of Internal Affairs).  

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