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Strategic Leadership for Health System Transformation

Strategic Leadership for Health System Transformation. W. Henry Mosley. Where do leaders operate?. Beyond Imagination. That’s Impossible. Looks Difficult. Easy to do. What is difficult? Impossible? Beyond imagination?. Our best thinking got us here.

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Strategic Leadership for Health System Transformation

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  1. Strategic Leadership for Health System Transformation W. Henry Mosley

  2. Where do leaders operate? Beyond Imagination That’s Impossible Looks Difficult Easy to do

  3. What is difficult? Impossible? Beyond imagination?

  4. Our best thinking got us here. • The problems that we face cannot be solved by the same level of thinking that created them. • Albert Einstein

  5. The Present Health System Is Perfectly Designed to Produce the Present Results If we want the same results, let us keep the present system!

  6. If We Want New Results, We Need to Redesign Our Health Production System

  7. Relationship between income and malnutrition

  8. The “disconnect” between income and malnutrition Alternatively, Malnutrition “falls” independent of “rises” in income (among the lowest income countries)

  9. Leadership the old way The “Blueprint” Strategy Interest groups Policymakers, planners Project Blueprints Managers, providers MIS Communities, households Evaluations Research, pilot projects Health

  10. Mental Models Sustaining the Blueprint Strategy Highly placed professionals have sufficient knowledge to prescribe interventions that will work in any social context Knowledge from “evidence-based” intervention research done in specific contexts have universal applicability Time-limited, pre-designed, inflexible projects are the best means of introducing innovative health interventions in any setting

  11. Mental Models Sustaining the Blueprint Strategy (continued) The institutions, personnel and services of National Ministries of Health constitute the “health system” of a country Short-term material investments and focused technical assistance to the MOH will produce sustainable improvements in a country’s health Using outside “experts” to gather, analyze, interpret and publish data is an effective means of gaining an understanding of the realities in the field

  12. The “Blueprint” Strategy A fundamental flaw Interest groups Policymakers, planners Project Blueprints Managers, providers MIS Communities, households Evaluations Research, pilot projects Health Disconnects learning from action Learning Action

  13. Social Consequences of Blueprint Projects • No (or limited) learning by the front-line health workers – who are the members of the households and communities where the action is taking place • Therefore, no fundamental changes in behaviors and no sustainability after the project is completed • Evidence – Look at the health disparities among developing countries and the inequities within countries after 50 years of top down projects

  14. Donor Aid in Developing Countries Too Often Produces Little Sustainable Benefits • The twin tragedies of global poverty1 • So many people in developing countries are seemingly fated to live horribly stunted lives and die such early deaths • After 50 years and more than $2.3 trillion in aid from the West, there is shockingly little to show for it. 1Paraphrased from: William Easterly, The White Man’s Burden. Why the West’s efforts to aid the rest have done so much ill and so little good. Penguin Press, NY, 2006

  15. So what do we need to change? • Ourselves first – We need to: • Break down the walls between all our formal institutions and learn to communicate with each other • Engage the people from the community and all sectors of government in a learningprocess to deepen our understanding of the realities of human development

  16. To change the way we act, we must first change the way we think • A first step is to change our “Mental Model” of what constitutes the “health system” of a country

  17. Do You Really Know What Are the Production Systems of Your Country? • You are the Minister of Agriculture. You are asked by a reporter from CNN to describe the agricultural system in your country. • What is your answer?

  18. Mental Models Define Our “Reality” and Pre-determine the Choices We Make and the Actions We Take • Who “produces crops” in your mental model of the agricultural system? • How does your answer determine the roles and functions of the Ministry of Agriculture?

  19. Do You Really Know What Are the Production Systems of Your Country? • You are the Minister of Health. You are asked by a reporter from CNN to describe the health system in your country. • What is your answer?

  20. Mental Models Define Our “Reality” and Pre-determine the Choices We Make and the Actions We Take • Who “produces health” in your mental model of the health system? • How does your answer determine the roles and functions of the Ministry of Health?

  21. The Household Production of Health • Premises • 1. Households are the primary units for the production of health.

  22. Households HEALTH Mothers are the primary managers and implementers of the household health production tasks, and women and children are the major “beneficiaries/victims” Therefore gender relations and status of women are key determinants of health in the developing world

  23. The Household Production of Health • Premises(continued) • 2. Households, like every social institution, have three basic capabilitiesfor the production of the desired outputs • Resources • Practices • Values

  24. Material money housing possessions utilities property equipment technologies Non-material gender time health ethnicity/language beliefs/knowledge/skills reputation social status social networks self-image/motivation Productive Capabilities Resources

  25. Formal Sanctioned by laws, religion, regulations, relating to: marriage/divorce property rights interpersonal relationships gender/sexual/violence personal mobility labor force participation Informal The customary ways of making decisions, taking actions relating to: gender roles marital relations child marriage/violence sexual relations health care provision money management freedom of mobility Productive Capabilities Practices

  26. Progress resistant Hierarchical Status based on birth/gender Knowledge from traditions Conformity honored Destiny due to fate Past/present oriented Closed minded, arrogant Suspicion of “others” Success by relationships Progress Promoting Egalitarian Status by achievement Learning by trial and error Creativity, innovation honored Destiny from self-reliance Future oriented Open minded, self-critical Mutual trust Success based on merit Productive Capabilities Values

  27. Households Values HEALTH Practices Resources • 1. Which health production capabilities are more important – material or non-material? Which do we measure? Why? • 2. What do we mean when we say that a person or household is “resourceful”? • Can we measure it? How?

  28. A culture is the product of the interactions of: Values Practices Resources

  29. Culture The DNA of Social Institutions • Culture is self-replicating from generation to generation • Like DNA, a cultural system is resistant to change Externally driven development programs typically ignore culture – Why?

  30. The Household Production of Health • Premises (continued) • 3. Households produce health in the context of the local community and the wider society – which is a nation’s health production system.

  31. The Health Production System Households HEALTH Government Communities

  32. The Health Production System

  33. The “Blueprint” Strategy What values dominate? Interest groups Policymakers, planners Project Blueprints Managers, providers MIS Communities, households Evaluations Research, pilot projects Health Disconnects learning from action Learning Action

  34. Progress resistant Hierarchical Status based on birth/gender Knowledge from traditions Conformity honored Destiny due to fate Past/present oriented Closed minded, arrogant Suspicion of “others” Success by relationships Progress Promoting Egalitarian Status by achievement Learning by trial and error Creativity, innovation honored Destiny from self-reliance Future oriented Open minded, self-critical Mutual trust Success based on merit Productive Capabilities Values

  35. What Are the Health Production Capabilities? For every 1000 families* in an LDC, complete the following <5 2000 – 4000+ <$10 >$400 High Low High Low ~8 24 ~5 7 Low High *About 5,000 persons

  36. The Burden of Disease What are the health problems in the population, and how do they come about? Source: WHO, World Health Report 2002. Reducing Risks, Promoting Healthy Life

  37. What are the “household production” tasks that relate to the “burden of disease”? • Undernutrition – food production/purchase and storage; dietary selection and meal preparation; family food allocation; dietary practices in pregnancy and postpartum; breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices; etc.

  38. What are the “household production” tasks that relate to the Burden of Disease? • Unsafe sex – negotiating gender roles and sexual relationships, “protecting” unmarried daughters (and sons), delaying sexual debut, arranging marriages, secluding women, limiting sexual partners, practicing contraception, obtaining abortions, utilizing condoms, etc.

  39. What are the “household production” tasks that relate to the Burden of Disease? • Unsafe water, sanitation and hygiene – collection, storage, utilization of water; bathing, washing clothing, bedding, utensils, use of soap; food preparation (incl. infant formula) and storage; latrine practices and waste disposal; etc. • Indoor smoke from solid fuel – collection of biomass for fuel; use of open indoor fires; lack of windows, etc

  40. How about sickness care? • From 70 – 90% of all sickness care takes place in the home* • Household members, especially mothers: • make the primary diagnoses of illnesses • assess the severity and likely outcomes • select among available providers and treatment options • procure and administer treatments *Source: WHO, World Health Report 2002. Reducing Risks, Promoting Healthy Life

  41. Leadership Challenges in Health • How do you get all the diverse actors in a “multi-minded” health production system to move together in towards a common goal? • How do you overcome the barriers to change generated by long-standing, self-sustaining institutional cultures at every level?

  42. Leadership Skills for Change • Catalytic - Shared Vision of a health future that people want to create • Enabling - Teamwork with trust, open-mindedness, transparency and mutual accountability for all outcomes • Learning – Generating new knowledge to mobilize the vast resources of ordinary people for change

  43. Leadership the New Way - “Learning Organization” Strategy Communities, households Health Demand Needs 3 Linking Action to Learning 1 Learning Decisions Outputs 2 Policymakers, planners Managers, providers Tasks Competencies Interest groups

  44. “Learning Organization” Strategy What values dominate? Communities, households Health Demand Needs 3 Linking Action to Learning 1 Learning Decisions Outputs 2 Policymakers, planners Managers, providers Tasks Competencies Interest groups

  45. Progress resistant Hierarchical Status based on birth/gender Knowledge from traditions Conformity honored Destiny due to fate Past/present oriented Closed minded, arrogant Suspicion of “others” Success by relationships Progress Promoting Egalitarian Status by achievement Learning by trial and error Creativity, innovation honored Destiny from self-reliance Future oriented Open minded, self-critical Mutual trust Success based on merit Productive Capabilities Values

  46. Maternal Mortality - Blueprint Project Can the community participate here? • Strategic objective – • Reduce MMR by 20% - from (500/100,000 to 400/100,000) in 5 years.

  47. Maternal Mortality - Shared Vision Can the community participate here? • Shared Vision - No mother dies from child birth in our community. • Should we do it alone? • Or through the Learning Organization?

  48. Bureaucratic Perceptions • 4% MMR reduction/year is “easy to do.” • 10% MMR reduction/year is “difficult!” • 25% MMR reduction/year is “impossible!” • Elimination of MMR is “beyond imagination!”

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