Washington: The U.S. and Kenya signed a five-year bilateral health compact Thursday that commits $2.5 billion in combined financing, with the United States providing $1.6 billion and Kenya pledging $850 million to bolster disease control and transition legacy USAID programs. Officials said similar agreements are expected. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
The Kenyan government and U.S. strategic planners benefited through a structured five-year financing compact that pairs U.S. funding with Kenyan fiscal commitments and advances an administration policy of aligning aid with strategic partners.
Some Kenyan NGOs, community health programs, and vulnerable patient groups faced immediate funding disruptions after the restructuring and defunding of legacy USAID-run programs.
U.S. and Kenya sign first of what are expected to be dozens of 'America First' global health deals
Los Angeles TimesU.S.-Kenya Sign First 'America First' Health Compact
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