%0 Journal Article %T Financial Assistance for Health Security: Effects of International Financial Assistance on Capacities for Preventing, Detecting, and Responding to Public Health Emergencies %J International Journal of Health Policy and Management %I Kerman University of Medical Sciences %Z 2322-5939 %A Boyce, Matthew R. %A Meyer, Mark J. %A Kraemer, John D. %A Katz, Rebecca %D 2022 %\ 10/01/2022 %V 11 %N 10 %P 2054-2061 %! Financial Assistance for Health Security: Effects of International Financial Assistance on Capacities for Preventing, Detecting, and Responding to Public Health Emergencies %K Capacity Development %K Financing %K Global Health %K Health Policy %K Health Security %K Health System Strengthening %R 10.34172/ijhpm.2021.120 %X Background  Health security funding is intended to improve capacities for preventing, detecting, and responding to public health emergencies. Recent years have witnessed substantial increases in the amounts of donor financial assistance to health security from countries, philanthropies, and other development partners. To date, no work has examined the effects of assistance on health security capacity development over time. This paper presents an analysis of the timelagged effects of assistance for health security (AHS) on levels of capacity. Methods  We collected publicly available health security assessment scores published between 2010 and 2019 and data relating to financial AHS. Using validated methods, we rescaled assessment scores on analogous scales to enable comparison and binned them in quartiles. We then used a distributed lag model (DLM) in a Bayesian ordinal regression framework to assess the effects of AHS on capacity development over time. Results  Strong evidence exists for associations between financial assistance and select capacities on a variety of lagged time intervals. Financial assistance had positive effects on zoonotic disease capacities in the year it was disbursed, and positive effects on legislation, laboratory, workforce, and risk communication capacities one year after disbursal. Financial assistance had negative effects on laboratory and emergency response capacities two years after it was disbursed. Financial assistance did not have measurable effects on coordination, antimicrobial resistance (AMR), food safety, biosafety, surveillance, or response preparedness capacities over the timeframe considered. Conclusion  Financial AHS is associated with positive effects for several core health security capacities. However, for the majority of capacities, levels of funding were not significantly associated with capacity level, though we cannot fully exclude endogeneity. Future work should continue to investigate these relationships in different contexts and examine other factors that may contribute to capacity development. %U https://www.ijhpm.com/article_4115_540f1e514a7001d54940e206b72a0eda.pdf