USAID/Vietnam Deputy Mission Director Bradley Bessire attended the event.

The USD 20.7 million USAID/PATH Healthy Markets project ran from 2014 to 2021 and was funded by the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. Through the project, USAID and PATH worked with the Ministry of Health’s Vietnam Administration for HIV/AIDS Control (VAAC) to generate sustainable approaches for increasing investment in, demand for, and supply of transformational HIV-related goods and services.

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(Photo for illustration: tuyengiao.vn)

USAID/PATH Healthy Markets was a key partner to the Ministry of Health on its introduction and scale-up of new and innovative approaches like HIV community-based testing, self-testing, and pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP—three key services that contributed to a 57 percent reduction in new HIV infections over the past decade. HIV self-test kits are now widely available through pharmacies and e-commerce, community-based testing services are being offered in 33 of Vietnam’s 63 provinces, and PrEP has been scaled to 29 provinces.

Through Healthy Markets–supported models alone, nearly 218,000 people were tested for HIV in the community and 8,986 people newly diagnosed with HIV were enrolled on lifesaving treatment. In addition, more than 46,000 HIV self-test kits were distributed and 16,700 people enrolled on PrEP, an oral pill that effectively prevents HIV infection when taken as prescribed.

Healthy Markets redefined the role of communities in the response, which is critical because key populations at risk for HIV - including men who have sex with men, transgender people, sex workers, and people who inject drugs - often prefer to receive HIV and other health services from their peers in community settings. Through Healthy Markets, Vietnam’s first-ever key population-led social enterprises and clinics were established and grown, and key population health providers were equipped with tools and skills to deliver integrated, person-centered HIV and primary health care services. Today, hundreds of key population-led organizations are at the forefront of cutting-edge HIV service delivery and demand creation in the country.

The project mobilized more than USD 12.6 million in investment into the national HIV response by facilitating deep shared-value partnerships with more than 150 private-sector partners, including HIV goods manufacturers and suppliers, distributors and retailers, community service providers, and multimedia companies.

Addressing the event, Bradley Bessire, Deputy Mission Director of USAID/Vietnam stressed that over the past eight years, USAID support has addressed critical gaps in accessible, affordable, community-based HIV care while strengthening the domestic market for HIV-related goods and services.

Regarding the next project as a further step in the fight against HIV in Vietnam, he revealed that it will focus on ensuring sustainability of the collective progress and addressing key remaining gaps to ultimately help Vietnam achieve its commitment to end AIDS by 2030.

The new five-year, USD 15 million project, named STEPS will see USAID's partnership with PATH and its core partner, Glink Vietnam, to maintain the momentum of Healthy Markets and catalyze greater HIV- and primary health care-related market growth.

Given more than 95% of the current oral PrEP market is subsidized by international donors, a major focus of the project will be on increasing sustainable PrEP financing through a blend of commercial, public-financed, and free PrEP services. The USAID/PATH Support for Technical Excellence and Private Sector Sustainability in Vietnam (STEPS) project will amplify access to integrated person-centered HIV and Primary Healthcare (PHC) services through innovative models of care; boost demand for and use of game changing health tools and technologies; and identify promising new public-private collaborative approaches that could significantly enhance the sustainable supply, delivery, and demand for HIV and PHC goods and services. These efforts will support Vietnam to attain its epidemic control goals outlined in the National Strategy to End AIDS by 2030. STEPS will catalyze community co-creation, VAAC governance and key population leadership, and targeted market and service delivery innovations to achieve these goals.

At the launch event, Associate Professor Phan Thi Thu Huong, Director of Vietnam Administration for HIV/AIDS Control (VAAC) highly praised USAID/PATH for continuously accelerating innovative health solutions that significantly contribute to the HIV/AIDS response in Vietnam. She expressed her belief that the U.S. side's momentum and the inspiring energy will move into the new USAID/PATH STEPS project.

Chung Anh