Person:
Pantanali, Carla

Global Practice on Health, Nutrition, and Population, The World Bank
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Health economics
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Global Practice on Health, Nutrition, and Population, The World Bank
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Last updated: January 31, 2023
Biography
Carla Pantanali is a Health Economist at the World Bank. Over the past four years, she has worked in Argentina, Belize, the Caribbean, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Peru, in areas including results-based financing, public health, non-communicable diseases, and economic analysis of health policies. Prior to joining the World Bank, she worked as a monitoring and evaluation specialist at the Ministry of Health of Argentina, as an international consultant at the Inter-American Development Bank, and at the World Bank’s country office in Argentina as a Junior Professional Associate. She has also been a professor and researcher in the Department of Economics of the University of Buenos Aires and of the Universidad del Salvador (Argentina). Ms. Pantanali holds a Master’s degree in Development Economics from the Université Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne (France) and a BA in Economics from Paris I Sorbonne in agreement with Universidad del Salvador (Argentina). She is an Argentine national.

Publication Search Results

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Publication
    Thirty Years of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Argentina: An Assessment of the National Health Response
    (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2015-07-08) Lavadenz, Fernando; Pantanali, Carla; Zeballos, Eliana; Adaszko, Ariel; Borruel, Miguel; Falistocco, Carlos; Kaynar, Vanesa; Laplacette, Graciela; Levite, Valeria; Vignau, Liliana
    This book delves into the combination of factors that make Argentina a success story in combating HIV/AIDS. It analyzes the national and inter-provincial burden of disease, the demographics of new HIV cases, the demand and supply-sides of service delivery, and conducts a cost-benefit analysis of the Argentine National HIV/AIDS Program from 2000 to 2010. This book will be of interest to those who wish to examine key programmatic innovations that have been essential to Argentina’s success in the fight against HIV/AIDS, such as the introduction of universal free antiretroviral treatment, a comprehensive legal framework for sexual and reproductive rights, the introduction of incentives and results-based financing in the HIV/AIDS program, electronic monitoring of supplies and medicines, and implementation of an electronic clinical governance system for improving the quality of care and patient follow-up. The 1992 creation of the National HIV/AIDS Program was a fundamental step for Argentina to reach the second lowest burden of HIV/AIDS in South America in 2010. Despite these successes, the fight against the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Argentina still poses continuous challenges, including a high number of new infections among young men who have sex with men, inequalities in HIV/AIDS rates between provinces, insufficient coverage of HIV diagnostic testing, relatively low expenditure on HIV prevention, and poses the question regarding the long-term financial sustainability of the program, considering the increasing number of patients in treatment and the high comparative cost of antiretroviral treatment.