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GLOBAL IMPACT OF A

-162K
INFECTIOUS DISEASE

SEQUESTRATION CUT OF 5%

HIV/AIDS treatment for 162,170 people will not be available, potentially leading to 37,000 more AIDS-related deaths and 72,830 more children becoming orphans.1

+37K

+72K
63,400 fewer HIV-positive pregnant women will receive services to prevent motherto-child transmission, leading to nearly 12,100 infants being infected with HIV.2

-63K

+12K

-1.1M

1.1 million fewer insecticide-treated mosquito nets will be procured, leading to over 3,000 deaths due to malaria; 1.9 million fewer people will receive treatment.3

NUTRITION & FOOD SECURITY


571,344 fewer children will receive nutritional interventions designed to save their lives and help prevent the irreversible damage to their brains and bodies caused by malnutrition.4

-571K

USA

2 million fewer people would have access reduced or denied to lifesaving food aid.5

USA

-2.0M

-1.1M

1.1 million fewer farmers and businesses in poor countries would receive support from Feed the Future to improve their business and increase their economic return, thereby limiting their ability to grow their businesses and communities out of poverty.6

GLOBAL HEALTH
303,000 fewer people will have access to improved water and sanitation.7

-303K

1.6 million fewer women and couples would receive contraceptive services and supplies, resulting in 457,000 unintended pregnancies, nearly 1,200 additional maternal deaths and 6,090 children losing their mothers.8

-2.7M
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-1.6M
EDUCATION
2,749,326 fewer children annually will have access to quality primary school education.9

1. Http://www.amfar.org/February-Update-The-Effect-of-Budget-Sequestration-on-Global-Health-Projecting-HumanImpact/#sthash.PMDDuwnM.dpuf 2. Ibid 3. Ibid 4. Based on the costing of five interventions Vitamin A supplementation, therapeutic zinc for the management of diarrhea, micronutrient powders, deworming and adequate iron and folic acid for pregnant women using data provided by The World Bank and accessed at http://bit.ly/VGOvIJ 5. This number is based upon a cost per beneficiary amount of approximately $35, drawn from an analysis of funding from the USAIDs three most recent International Food Assistance Annual Reports Total Title II costs were divided by total number of beneficiaries served. 6. Statistics and information are from an analysis of the Feed the Future Progress Report and page 384 of the FY13 CBJ. As retrieved from http://www.feedthefuture.gov/sites/default/files/ftf_progress_report_2012.pdf and http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/185014.pdf 7. Estimate based on field data collected from WASH Cost-IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, WASH Advocates, Millennium Water Alliance, CARE, Water Aid America, Water.org, Wine to Water, Water For People, World Vision, Plan USA, Catholic Relief Services, USAID, The World Bank, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and other organizations, reflecting major variations in geography, hydrology, climate and accessibility that affect program design and delivery in target populations. 8. For methodology see Guttmacher Institutes fact sheet Just the Numbers: The Impact of U.S. International Family Planning Assistance, May 2012, http://www.guttmacher.org/media/resources/FB-Family-Planning-Assistance.pdf 9. This figure is based on the average number of primary and secondary age learners enrolled in USG supported education programs through FY09-FY11 and the correlating fiscal year appropriations levels to determine average cost per student.

Data compiled by:

Infographic designed by:

A UNITED VOICE FOR GLOBAL CHANGE

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