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STRENGTHENING HEALTH SYSTEMS. Anne Mills DCPP Editor London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. BACKGROUND. Core of DCP2 is evidence and analysis of burden of disease and cost-effectiveness Interventions usually delivered through a health system
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STRENGTHENING HEALTH SYSTEMS Anne Mills DCPP Editor London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
BACKGROUND • Core of DCP2 is evidence and analysis of burden of disease and cost-effectiveness • Interventions usually delivered through a health system • Cost-effectiveness data usually reflect a reasonable level of technical efficiency – may not be readily achievable in real life • Need to know how best to strengthen health systems so they are able to deliver interventions cost-effectively and at scale
AIM OF PRESENTATION Summarise key messages from the wealth of evidence in the chapters of DCP2 concerned with strengthening national health systems
STRENGTHENING HEALTH SYSTEMS • Stewardship/regulation • Organisational structures and their financing • General management functions - human resources and quality assurance NB: • Lack of evidence • Effectiveness of approaches depend on starting point
STEWARDSHIP/REGULATION • Strengthen accountability to communities and increase user voice (eg Burkina Faso; Ceara) • Enforce regulations (where capacity exists) • Use approaches that work with the private sector
ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURES AND FINANCING • Clarification of purchaser and provider roles within public health sector • Decentralisation to hospitals and ‘districts’ • Vertical versus horizontal modes of organising and managing service provision • Contracting out service provision
Improved health care coverage rates CONTRACTING EXPERIMENT IN CAMBODIA 1997-2001(Swartzand Bushan 2004) Poor benefited more than richer groups
HOSPITAL CONTRACTS IN SOUTH AFRICA • Contractors’ costs lower than public; similar quality • Cost advantage largely due to higher staff productivity • Contract cost to government > government cost of provision • Study led to re-negotiation of contract terms
CONTRACTS WITH GPs IN SOUTH AFRICA • Formal aspects of contracts had little influence (eg design, monitoring, sanctions) • Social and institutional factors important • Contracts highly ‘relational’ and context specific • Policy implications: emphasise cooperation, shared interests, professionalism
HUMAN RESOURCES • Use local cadres (not internationally mobile); give specific skills (eg Malawi: caesarean section training to clinical officers) • Use incentive payments if can be regulated and controlled • Otherwise use broader performance management approach emphasising non financial rewards
Good quality possible even in highly resource constrained settings Evidence that two approaches can work: Policies which directly affect individual and group practice (eg shopkeepers, Kilifi) QUALITY ASSESSMENT/ASSURANCE • Policies which change structural conditions and indirectly affect providers (eg contracting)
TARGETING RESOURCES • Systems level – eg resource allocation formulae; financial incentives to users • Service level – eg planning and budgeting frameworks; consumer education and information
THE TANZANIA ESSENTIAL HEALTH INTERVENTIONS PROJECT (TEHIP)(de Savigny et al 2004) • Provided tools for district level decision makers to influence resource allocation • Linked burden of disease data with expenditure on interventions • Showed improved match between disease burden and district budget
SELECTED KEY MESSAGES • Keep the health of the system in mind whenever major new programmes are put in place - ensure disease-specific efforts contribute to system strengthening • Reforms affecting organisational structures and human resource management more likely to be successfully implemented if they are incremental and gradual • Successfully linking financial incentives to performance dependent on careful monitoring; difficult in low income settings without continuing external involvement • Capacity strengthening required at all levels
SELECTED RESEARCH PRIORITIES • Cost and effectiveness of approaches to strengthening system capacity • Identification of delivery strategies that can maintain high coverage for specific interventions • Identification of governance and institutional arrangements that will help achieve health improvements for the poorest
RESEARCH CAPACITY STRENGTHENING (Source: Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research 2004) • Project funding for health systems research < 0.02% of annual developing country health expenditure • More than half of research projects had budgets < $25,000 • A third of institutions engaged in health systems research had no doctoral level staff • Only 5 percent of health systems research literature in Medline concerns developing countries • Great need for strengthening capacity in health systems research