Thanks for your comment! Apologies that it took a while to respond to this.
Re: how much funding is needed to successfully roll out the vaccine, we’ve provided a budget breakdown on the grant page. The majority of this funding is going toward training and other activities needed to distribute the vaccine, vaccine-related supplies, and shipping and handling for the doses donated by GSK. Only about $1.8 million of the total, or less than half, is going toward the costs of having PATH and WHO provide technical support for this project.
For every grant opportunity we evaluate, we do consider the likelihood that another funder will step in to cover the costs absent our support. In a conversation with PATH and WHO, we learned that there were no other suitable candidates for funding this rollout of RTS,S to comparator areas, though we didn’t independently verify this.
As for whether the governments of Kenya, Ghana, and Malawi could successfully speed up the implementation of RTS,S without NGO/WHO technical support, this is a subjective assessment. We frequently hear from NGOs that the governments where programs we fund operate tend to have many competing priorities, so progress on projects like this can be slow. The theory is that providing dedicated funding (and with it, human capacity) for a single project can accelerate the timeline of results. We try to confirm whether this is right by talking to other relevant actors, including government officials themselves.
It would be interesting to try out what you suggest—giving the funding directly to a country government to see if they could achieve the same results without technical assistance—but because there are so many country-specific factors that inform the success of an intervention, we think it’d be hard to tell if a slower vaccine rollout in a given country was due to lack of technical assistance or some other factor.
Hi, Nick,
Thanks for your comment! Apologies that it took a while to respond to this.
Re: how much funding is needed to successfully roll out the vaccine, we’ve provided a budget breakdown on the grant page. The majority of this funding is going toward training and other activities needed to distribute the vaccine, vaccine-related supplies, and shipping and handling for the doses donated by GSK. Only about $1.8 million of the total, or less than half, is going toward the costs of having PATH and WHO provide technical support for this project.
For every grant opportunity we evaluate, we do consider the likelihood that another funder will step in to cover the costs absent our support. In a conversation with PATH and WHO, we learned that there were no other suitable candidates for funding this rollout of RTS,S to comparator areas, though we didn’t independently verify this.
As for whether the governments of Kenya, Ghana, and Malawi could successfully speed up the implementation of RTS,S without NGO/WHO technical support, this is a subjective assessment. We frequently hear from NGOs that the governments where programs we fund operate tend to have many competing priorities, so progress on projects like this can be slow. The theory is that providing dedicated funding (and with it, human capacity) for a single project can accelerate the timeline of results. We try to confirm whether this is right by talking to other relevant actors, including government officials themselves.
It would be interesting to try out what you suggest—giving the funding directly to a country government to see if they could achieve the same results without technical assistance—but because there are so many country-specific factors that inform the success of an intervention, we think it’d be hard to tell if a slower vaccine rollout in a given country was due to lack of technical assistance or some other factor.
I hope that’s helpful!
Best,
Miranda Kaplan
GiveWell Communications Associate