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Health System of SURINAME. Maltie Algoe Elly van Kanten. Monitoring and Analyzing Health System Change and Health Reform , May 30 th – June 1 st , 2006 - Belize. Content:. Health System Characteristics Health System Performance Health Status and Outcomes
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Health System ofSURINAME Maltie Algoe Elly van Kanten Monitoring and Analyzing Health System Change and Health Reform , May 30th – June 1st , 2006 - Belize
Content: • Health System Characteristics • Health System Performance • Health Status and Outcomes • Relevant Trends and Interventions
HS Characteristics Guiding principle: Health care is the right of every citizen (Constitution, art. 36, sub 2) Overall Goal: To achieve optimal health status for the majority of the population through provision of available, accessible and affordable health care
Main responsibility of the MOH To promote Public Health through : Improvement of living and working conditions Health education Main tasks: Policy Development Health Planning / Regulation Coordination / Supervision Monitoring & Evaluation Quality Assurance
Demand: Population Supply: MOH Professionals NGO’s • Finance: • MOF • MSA • State Health Ins. • Private Insurance • Out-of-pocket
30000 20000 10000 0 10000 20000 30000 95-99 90-94 85-89 80-84 75-79 70-74 65-69 60-64 55-59 50-54 45-49 40-44 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 15-19 10-14 05-09 00-04 Males Females Population (census 2004): 492 829by ethnicity:
Planning division Legislation division Public Relations External relations Organization & Management • General affairs: • Personnel • Finance • Maintenance • Expedition Inspectorate Bureau of PUBLIC HEALTH NAP STI Clinic Dermatology services Foundations and Institutions • PHC: • Regional Health Services • Medical Mission • HOSPITALS • Psychiatric Center
Structure of the MOH • Main Office: Central Administration (incl. Planning and Legislation) • Inspectorate • Bureau of Public Health
Primary Health Care • Coastal area - RHS (8 districts, 50 clinics, 100,000 clients) - Private GP’s • Interior - MM (2 districts, 50 centers, 50,000 clients) Several NGO’s providing: • SRH services • Health Promotion • (Home) Care & Support • Research
Secondary Health Care 5 General hospitals: • 2 private (one with link to interior) • 3 public (two with ER, one specialized in MCH) 1 Mental hospital Total # of beds: 1318 # of beds per 1000 pop: 2.7 Occupancy rate: 70 %
Distribution of spending by payer National Health Accounts, MSH, march 2002
Distribution of spending by level of care National Health Accounts, MSH, march 2002
10 Leading causes of Hospitalization (2000) • 1. Pregnancy, Childbirth and Puerperium • 2. Gastrointestinal diseases • 3. Hypertension and Cardiovascular diseases • 4. Diseases of the respiratory system • 5. External causes • 6. Diseases originating in Perinatal period • 7. Cerebrovascular diseases • 8. Malign neoplasmata • 9. Certain Vector-borne diseases • 10. Urogenital disorders
10 Leading causes of death, 2000 - 2004 • 1. Cardiovascular diseases • 2. External causes • 3. Malign neoplasmata • 4. Diseases from the perinatal period • 5. HIV / AIDS • 6. DM • 7. Respiratory disorders • 8. Gastro – intestinal disorders • 9. Diseases of tractus Urogenitalis • 10. Intestinal disorders
Achievement of MDG’sImmunization Coverage 85%PMR , IMR & <5 MR per 1000 of LB
Performance: Strengths & Opportunities Demand: • Strong NGO involvement • Increasing awareness for health rights Supply: • Independent financing and provision of health care Financing: • Subsidized health care for the poor • Social health insurance for civil servants • Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria
Performance: Weaknesses & Threats Demand: • HIV/AIDS (increasing infections) • Illegal abortions (est. 10,000 /year) Supply: • Weak MOH • Structural migration of nurses • Unequal access to health care • Insufficient focus on cross cutting issues : Gender, Environment, Youth Financing: • No correlation between health expenses of 9,4% of GDP and quality of care
HSR “Support for HSR”(1st project) (1998 – 2003) Series of studies on: • Household Budget Survey • National Health Expenditures (NHA) • Performance of PHC • Actuarial model for the State Health Insurance • Drug Procurement • Integration of SHI and MSA • Payment Systems • Distribution of medical cards • Quality Assurance
HSR “Support for implementation of HSR”(2nd project) (2004 – 2008) Project Components: • Improve performance of preventive and primary health care services • Improve access to medicines • Reduce costs and improve efficiency • Improve equity • Strengthen MOH
Health Sector Plan(2004 – 2008) Strategies • Strengthening primary care and prevention • Improving both efficiency and quality of hospital care • Promoting the financial accessibility of health care services • Health care cost control • Strengthening support systems (procurement, logistics, communication, NHIS) • HRD (quality, quantity, motivation) • Improving and safeguarding quality
Multi-annual Development Plan(2005-2010) & MOH policy note (2006 – 2007) Planned interventions (Policy Framework): • National health costs insurance and financing • Improve infrastructure • Basic health care package (focused on prevention) • Improve management (QA, data acquisition) • HRD and HRM • Critical review of health- and environmental legislation;
Relevant Trends / Interventions Strengthen PHC: • Special attention for deprived areas and vulnerable groups; • Community Participation • Addressing chronic diseases • Integration of preventive components in PHC • Emphasis on prevention ( health education), early detection ( screening) and secondary prevention (multidisciplinary treatment)
Relevant Trends / Interventions Intersectoral approach: • Recognition of intersectoral influences on health (by agriculture, labor, education, housing etc) • Need for intersectoral cooperation (e.g. in HIV/AIDS) International commitments: • MDG’s (demanding specific attention) • Global Fund (demanding coordinating mechanism)