DAVOS, Switzerland, Jan. 24 (Xinhua) -- Business coalitions have emerged as
a highly effective platform for businesses to address the challenges of AIDS and
are helping 1 million companies tackle the disease in the workplace, said a
report by the World Economic Forum (WEF).
The report was released on Thursday by the forum's Global Health Initiative
and is the first global report on business coalitions and the role they play in
supporting the private sector to tackle AIDS around the world.
To date, four regional and 47 national business coalitions have been
formed, and together they have supported over 1 million companies in
implementing local AIDS workplace programs, said the report.
The business coalition is a relatively new concept worldwide, with over 40
percent launched in the last two years and over 60 percent in the last five
years.
"By placing a spotlight on the increasingly important role that business
coalitions are playing in the response to AIDS around the world, we hope that
this global report will spur further engagement and action by businesses," said
Richard Samans, managing director at the forum.
"Business coalitions help individual companies respond to the pandemic more
effectively through collaboration, in particular by providing them with tools
and processes that have been developed and tested in practice by their peers,"
he added.
The report presents the current global landscape of business coalition
activity, reviewing their different organizational, governance, membership and
financial models, outlining best practices and highlighting the key challenges
they face as they strive to serve the private sector.
The report underlines five points of consideration for existing and
emerging coalitions to effectively support businesses in tackling AIDS while
ensuring their long-term stability:
-- Establish a coalition based on national HIV prevalence and the impact on
local businesses;
-- Engage all relevant stakeholders upfront before launching a national
coalition;
-- Ensure continued private sector engagement and investment;
-- Adapt the business model and services to suit the changing environment;
-- Proactively seek to build in-house skills and expertise.
The Global Health Initiative aims to facilitate and stimulate greater
business engagement in health systems and in the fight against HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis (TB) and malaria.