As many as 115 million people have been driven into extreme poverty because of Covid-19, further limiting their access to treatment and support. In some countries, school closures and lockdowns made it particularly difficult for adolescent girls and young women to receive health services.
There were a few glimmers of hope amid the bleak news: The crisis forced health agencies and ministries in many poor countries to adopt innovations that may outlast the pandemic. Among them: dispensing to patients multi-month supplies of TB and H.I.V. drugs, as well as condoms, lubricants and needles; using digital tools to monitor TB treatment; and testing simultaneously for H.I.V., TB and Covid-19.
For example, in Nigeria, community health workers who tested people for Covid also looked for cases of H.I.V. and TB. As a result, the country became one of the few to see a rise in H.I.V. diagnoses compared with 2019.
In Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, community health workers on motorbikes delivered insecticide-treated bed nets door to door, rather than distributing them from trucks in village squares. This approach allowed them to reach more households than before and helped to cut down the number of malaria infections.
“It’s a bit more expensive” to deliver nets to individual households, Mr. Sands said, but “that was an investment that was clearly worth doing.”
To minimize the impact of the pandemic, the Global Fund has spent about $1 billion more than its usual budget, Mr. Sands said. In March 2020, the organization released $500 million to help countries cope; as of August 2021, it had raised $3.3 billion for use in 107 countries.
The funds have been used to shore up health systems, to provide tests, treatments and oxygen, and to give personal protective equipment to health care workers.