Corporate Engagement

Governments and donors alone cannot reach the ambitious health goals associated with Family Planning 2020, ending preventable child and maternal deaths, and achieving 95-95-95 goals. As part of a total market approach, corporate stakeholders should be engaged to mobilize expertise and products, capture efficiencies, and even raise financial resources. 

SHOPS Plus facilitates corporate engagement by:

  • Conducting analysis on gaps in national and regional health programming to identify priority areas where expertise or other resources from corporates—even those not in the health sector—can be leveraged
  • Brokering partnerships designed with both social and commercial benefits, in which resources and expertise from the corporate sector are used to advance a common health goal
  • Identifying how the provision of health services for employees may help companies save money by reducing absenteeism, reducing recruitment and training requirements for new staff, and limiting costs of health coverage
  • Working with multiple stakeholders to implement partnerships that use the expertise of donors, governments, civil society, and corporates
     

Example of our work

In Kenya, SHOPS Plus is working with global tea brand, Twinings Tea Ltd, to expand access to women’s and children’s health care for smallholder tea farmers that Twinings sources from. SHOPS Plus and Twinings are collaborating on a pilot that seeks to develop a sustainable service delivery model that can be replicated throughout Twinings’ supply chain in Kenya.

In Senegal, SHOPS Plus is working with local gas and logistics conglomerate, Fûts Métalliques de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (FUMOA), to raise awareness and use of the Milda long-lasting insecticide nets and Aquatabs (chlorine water purification tablets) that FUMOA is buying from the project’s local social marketing partner, L’Agence pour le Développement du Marketing Social (ADEMAS). 

In Tanzania, the project is working with USAID and North Star Alliance in Tanzania to address the health and safety of transport workers who are more affected by HIV/AIDS and other health issues than the general population. The project supported North Star Alliance to register their 6 clinics as local service delivery sites with the Tanzania Private Hospital Advisory Board and facilitated access to required trainings, commodities, and reporting tools to support the expansion of HIV services, including access to treatment, and financial opportunities to support sustainability.

In India, SHOPS Plus partnered with Viacom 18 and MTV’s Staying Alive Foundation on the development and implementation of the MTV Nishedh (meaning Taboo) campaign. The campaign took the form of a 15 episode radio series designed to engage young people and provide them with relevant, accurate information on reproductive health and well-being. Content and airing of the series leveraged various companies’ expertise in media, reaching youth, working with providers, and providing family planning counseling for the target population.

Countries: India (Improving Diarrhea Practices, Increasing birth spacing), Kenya, SenegalTanzania

Resources about Corporate Engagement

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Sustaining Health Outcomes through the Private Sector (SHOPS) Plus is a five-year cooperative agreement (AID-OAA-A-15-00067) funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). This website is made possible by the generous support of the American people through USAID. The information provided on this website is not official U.S. government information and does not represent the views or positions of USAID or the U.S. government.

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