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“People will die,” said Dr. Catherine Kyobutungi, executive director of the research center on the African population and health, “but we will never know, because even the programs to count the dead are cut”.
The finished projects include HIV treatment programs that had served millions of people, the main malaria control programs in the worst African countries and global efforts to sweep off the polio.
Here are some of the projects that the New York Times has confirmed have been deleted:
A 131 million dollars subsidy to the UNICEF Polomielite immunization program, which paid for planning, logistics and delivery of vaccines to millions of children.
A 90 million dollar contract with the chemonic society for bed nets, malaria tests and treatments that would protect 53 million people.
A project managed by FHI 360 that supported the efforts of the community health workers to go to door to door in search of malnourished children in Yemen. He recently discovered that one in five children was critical due to the country’s civil war.
All operating costs and 10 percent of the drug budget of the global drug structure, the main supply channel of the World Organization for Tuberculosis drugs, which last year provided a treatment with tuberculosis with almost three million people, including 300,000 children.
The care and treatment projects of the HIV managed by the Foundation for the Pediatric AIDS of Elizabeth Glaser who were providing life -saving drugs to 350,000 people in Lesotho, Tanzania and Eswatini, including 10,000 children and 10,000 pregnant women who were receiving care so as not to transmit the virus to their children at birth.
A project in Uganda to trace people’s contacts with Ebola, conduct surveillance and bury those who died of viruses.
A contract to manage and distribute medical supplies for a value of 34 million dollars in Kenya, including 2.5 million HIV treatments, 750,000 HIV tests, 500,000 malaria treatments, 6.5 million malaria tests and 315,000 anti -malaria bed networks.
Eighty -seven shelters who dealt with 33,000 women victims of rape and domestic violence in South Africa.
A project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that manages the only source of water for 250,000 people in the fields for displaced people located in the center of the violent conflict in the Eastern of the country.
Pre and post-Natal health services for 3.9 million children and 5.7 million women in Nepal.
A project managed by Helen Keller Intl in six countries in West Africa that last year provided over 35 million people with medicine to prevent and treat neglected tropical diseases, such as Trachoma, Linfatic Filariasi, Schistosomiasis and Oncocciase.
A project in Nigeria that provides 5.6 million children and 1.7 million women with care for severe and acute malnutrition. The resolution means that 77 health facilities have completely stopped taking care of children with serious acute malnutrition, putting 60,000 children under the age of 5 at an immediate risk of death.
A project in Sudan that manages the only operating health clinics in one of the largest areas of the Kordofan region, cutting all health services.
A project that serves more than 144,000 people in Bangladesh who has provided food for women in malnutrite pregnancy and vitamin A to children.
A program managed by the path of the help agency, called Reach Malaria, which protected over 20 million people from the disease. He provided malaria drugs to children at the beginning of the rainy season in 10 countries in Africa.
A project managed by Plan International that has provided drugs and other medical supplies, health care, treatment of the programming of malnutrition, water and toilet -heanitarian services for 115,000 displaced people or affected by the conflict in northern Ethiopia.
More than $ 80 million for Unids, the United Nations Agency, which financed the work to help countries improve the processing of HIV, including data collection programs and guard dogs for the provision of the service.
The initiative program for the malaria of the president called Evolve, which has carried out mosquito control in 21 countries with methods that include the spraying of insecticides within the houses (protect 12.5 million people last year) and the treatment of reproduction sites to kill larvae.
A project that provides a treatment for HIV and tuberculosis with 46,000 people in Uganda, managed by the Baylor College of Medicine Children’s Foundation, Uganda.
Smart4TB, the main research consortium that works on prevention, diagnostics and treatment for tuberculosis.
Demographic and health surveys, a data collection project in 90 countries that were crucial and sometimes the only sources of health information and maternal and childhood mortality, nutrition, reproductive health and HIV infections, among many other health indicators. The project was also the foundation of budgets and planning.