Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 122.djvu/2950

 12 2 STA T . 2 9 2 7PUBLIC LA W 11 0– 29 3—J UL Y 30, 200 8‘ ‘ (25)enha n c e t hec o o rdi nation o fU nited S tate sb i l ateral efforts to co m bat g lobal HIV/A I D S w ith other ma j or pu blic and pri v ate entities ‘‘(2 6 ) enhance the attention given to the national strategic HIV/AIDS plans of countries receiving United States assistance b y— ‘‘(A) reviewing the planning and programmatic decisions associated with that assistance; and ‘‘( B ) helping to strengthen such national strategies , if necessary; ‘‘(2 7 ) support activities described in the G lobal P lan to Stop T B, including— ‘‘(A) e x panding and enhancing the coverage of the Directly O bserved Treatment Short - course (DOTS) in order to treat individuals infected with tuberculosis and HIV, including multi-drug resistant or extensively drug resistant tuberculosis; and ‘‘(B) improving coordination and integration of HIV/ AIDS and tuberculosis programming; ‘‘(2 8 ) ensure coordination between the Global AIDS C oordi- nator and the M alaria Coordinator and address issues of comor- bidity between HIV/AIDS and malaria; and ‘‘(2 9 ) include a longer term estimate of the projected resource needs, progress toward greater sustainability and country ownership of HIV/AIDS programs, and the anticipated role of the United States in the global effort to combat HIV/ AIDS during the 10 -year period beginning on October 1, 201 3.’ ’. (b) REPORT .—Section 101(b) of such Act (22 U.S.C. 7611(b)) is amended to read as follows

‘‘(b) REPORT.— ‘‘(1) I NG ENER AL .— N ot later than October 1, 2009, the President shall submit a report to the appropriate congressional committees that sets forth the strategy described in subsection (a). ‘‘(2) CONTENT S .—The report re q uired under paragraph (1) shall include a discussion of the following elements: ‘‘(A) The purpose, scope, methodology, and general and specific objectives of the strategy. ‘‘(B) The problems, ris k s, and threats to the successful pursuit of the strategy. ‘‘(C) The desired goals, objectives, activities, and out- come-related performance measures of the strategy. ‘‘(D) A description of future costs and resources needed to carry out the strategy. ‘‘( E ) A delineation of United States Government roles, responsibility, and coordination mechanisms of the strategy. ‘‘( F ) A description of the strategy— ‘‘(i) to promote harmoni z ation of United States assistance with that of other international, national, and private actors as elucidated in the ‘Three Ones’; and ‘‘(ii) to address existing challenges in harmoni- zation and alignment. ‘‘(G) A description of the manner in which the strategy will— Presid e nt.

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