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USAID Kizazi Hodari (Brave Generation) Southern Zone Project

Program Overview

Deloitte through KHSZ Activity collaborates with Civil Society Organizations (CSOs)and key stakeholders in eleven regions to strengthen linkages between health facilities and the community, build local capacity, and deliver contextually relevant interventions to orphans and vulnerable children (OVC), youth, and their caregivers.

Deloitte Tanzania has been awarded a contract to implement a Kizazi Hodari – Sothern Zone project in Tanzania. This is a five years project (March 2022 to February 2026) funded by the American People through USAID aiming at supporting the Government of Tanzania’s (GOT) Ministry of Health to achieve HIV epidemic control by improving the health, well-being, and protection of OVC and youth in high HIV burden communities within the Southern Zones of Tanzania specifically Iringa, Njombe and Ruvuma regions. The program intends to increase access to and use of health/HIV, social, and protection services among OVC and youth in order to contribute to 95-95-95 goals: 95% of persons living with HIV (PLHIV) know their HIV status; 95% of PLHIV who know their status are on treatment; and 95% of PLHIV on treatment are virally suppressed, by 2030.

Deloitte through KHSZ Activity collaborates with Civil Society Organizations (CSOs)and key stakeholders in eleven regions to strengthen linkages between health facilities and the community, build local capacity, and deliver contextually relevant interventions to orphans and vulnerable children (OVC), youth, and their caregivers. The Activity supports and provides technical leadership on child protection, scale-up HIV prevention, and violence prevention, and implements the DREAMS intervention among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) and adolescent boys and young men (ABYM). The KHSZ Activity also provides technical, material assistance and/or administrative and management support to the Government of Tanzania- Ministry of Health (MOH), Ministry of Community Development, Gender, Women and Special Groups (MCDGWSG), Presidents Office Regional Administration and Local Government (PORALG) and communities to increase their capacity to manage, refine and develop the OVC service packages and support, thereby contributing to OVC Activity’s role in advancing HIV epidemic control.

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