The Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. (CHAI) is a global health organization committed to our mission of saving lives and reducing the burden of disease in low-and middle-income countries. We work at the invitation of governments to support them and the private sector to create and sustain high-quality health systems.
CHAI was founded in 2002 in response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic with the goal of dramatically reducing the price of life-saving drugs and increasing access to these medicines in the countries with the highest burden of the disease. Over the following two decades, CHAI has expanded its focus. Today, along with HIV, we work in conjunction with our partners to prevent and treat infectious diseases such as COVID-19, malaria, tuberculosis, and hepatitis. Our work has also expanded into cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and other non-communicable diseases, and we work to accelerate the rollout of lifesaving vaccines, reduce maternal and child mortality, combat chronic malnutrition, and increase access to assistive technology. We are investing in horizontal approaches to strengthen health systems through programs in human resources for health, digital health, and health financing. With each new and innovative program, our strategy is grounded in maximizing sustainable impact at scale, ensuring that governments lead the solutions, that programs are designed to scale nationally, and learnings are shared globally.
At CHAI, our people are our greatest asset, and none of this work would be possible without their talent, time, dedication and passion for our mission and values. We are a highly diverse team of enthusiastic individuals across 40 countries with a broad range of skillsets and life experiences. CHAI is deeply grounded in the countries we work in, with majority of our staff based in program countries. Learn more about our exciting work: http://www.clintonhealthaccess.org
CHAI is an Equal Opportunity Employer, and is committed to providing an environment of fairness, and mutual respect where all applicants have access to equal employment opportunities. CHAI values diversity and inclusion, and recognizes that our mission is best advanced by the leadership and contributions of people with diverse experience, backgrounds, and culture.
CHAI’s Malaria Program
CHAI’s global malaria program provides direct technical and operational support to countries around the globe to strengthen their malaria programs and reduce the burden of this preventable, treatable disease, while supporting governments to identify inequities and address them. We support governments to scale up effective interventions for prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and surveillance, with the goals of sustainably reducing the number of malaria-related illnesses and deaths for all worldwide in the short-term and accelerating progress towards malaria elimination in the long term.
CHAI’ work in malaria case management provides support for National Malaria Control Programs and other key MOH departments throughout sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and Central America. CHAI’s case management support involves providing analytical, operational, and management expertise to help CHAI’s country teams and MOH partners (NMCPs, supply chain divisions, community health directorates, etc.,) achieve high coverage in diagnosing, treating and curing malaria patients. On a global scale, CHAI collaborates with global malaria stakeholders like the Global Fund to Fight AIDs, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund) and the World Health Organization (WHO) on malaria policies, priorities and strategies to improve patient access to malaria care.
Program Overview
CHAI established presence in Sierra Leone in 2015. While CHAI’s original intent was to provide assistance related to the Ebola response, it became clear based on preliminary conversations with the government that the real need for partner support was in the realm of health systems strengthening. CHAI in response to the government need developed a scope of work focusing on Human Resources for Health and Supply Chain, supporting the HRH Directorate within MOH and the National Pharmaceutical Procurement Unit (NPPU) respectively.
CHAI made significant progress in both areas and was able to build trust and establish strong relationships with the government. In recent years CHAI has expanded its support to the Government to include programs on sexual and reproductive health, vaccines delivery, assistive technology, geospatial data use (GRID3), and improving access to medical oxygen. With each new and innovative program, our strategy is grounded in maximizing sustainable impact at scale, ensuring that the government of Sierra Leone leads the solutions, that programs are designed to scale nationally, and learnings are shared globally.
CHAI recently initiated collaboration and support to the National Malaria Control Program (NMCP) of the MOH and has spent its initial months trying to understand the strengths and areas for improvement within the malaria program, the broader health system, and the partner and donor engagement with it. CHAI aims to empower the program to regularly utilize disaggregated data and analytics for effective decision-making in both programmatic and strategic planning and operations.
Through a set of technical and operational assessments, CHAI has identified potential areas of work and has prioritized them based on impact and feasibility. We anticipate our initial focus to be on strengthening data reporting, data analysis, and disease surveillance based on the results of an in-progress surveillance assessment and epidemiological stratification. CHAI is also positioned to provide strategic and financing support to the national malaria control program, following successful costing of the malaria Operational Plan and application to the Global Fund. CHAI will continue to consult with government and non-government partners in country to evaluate how it can best add value to ongoing efforts.
Position Overview
This position reports to the CHAI Malaria Program Manager in Sierra Leone, and will will work closely on issues related to malaria case management from a gender, equity and diversity perspective (at all levels of the health system), including supply chain management and community health The Associate with technical partner organizations, donors, governments and the civil society.
The successful candidate will have excellent communications skills and cultural sensitivity, as s/he will be working closely with global and country partners. The Associate will have strong organizational and project management skills and will be capable of synthesizing data and literature, conducting rapid gender sensitive analyses and communicating such analyses on a regular basis in a clear and concise manner to colleagues and partners. The successful candidate will be able to collaborate effectively with other teams, function efficiently in a semi-independent setting, and thus be a self-motivated individual capable of managing multiple tasks at once and making sound independent decisions regarding data analysis.
CHAI places considerable emphasis on personal qualities such as resourcefulness, tenacity, independence, patience, humility, and a strong work ethic. The Malaria Associate will be embedded within the National Malaria Control Program (NMCP) at the Ministry of Health in Freetown, fostering relationships with key stakeholders from the government, donors, and the international community in Sierra Leone.
Up to 40% travel is expected and might support field activities in remote areas.
Providing technical support including but not limited to:
In close collaboration with CHAI’s country, regional and global teams, NMCPs and other stakeholders, provide operational and implementation support including but not limited to:
Advantages:
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