what is a health system? what is health system strengthening?
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What is a health system?
What is health system
strengthening?
IHPSR Presentation 2
www.hpsa-africa.org
@hpsa_africa
www.slideshare.net/hpsa_africa
Introduction to Health Policy and
Systems Research
Outline
• Definition of a health system
• Conceptual frameworks that help us to
think about health systems
• Considering policy for health system
strengthening
‘A health system consists of all
organizations, people and actions whose
primary intent is to promote, restore, or
maintain health.’
WHO, 2007, p.2
http://www.who.int/healthsystems/strategy/en/
A health systemHealth
• Beyond sickness
– mental and physical
health
– social wellbeing
• Beyond the individual
– actors/agents
promoting health and
wellbeing
– domestic/national
AND international
factors impacting on
health and health
system agents
A complex adaptive
system
• A set of interacting
elements
• More than the sum of the
parts
• Acts in ways that are not
fully predictable, e.g.
feedback loops
• Influenced by history
• Self-organising
• Resistant to change
Antwerp model: Van Olmen et al. 2010
Figure 1 The health system dynamics framework in its generic form
Frenk, 1994
COLLECTIVE MEDIATOR
HEALTH CARE
PROVIDERS
ORGANISATION
POPULATION
ORGANISATION
RESOURCE
GENERATORS
OTHER SECTORS
Basis for
eligibility
Degree of
control
Degree of
control
Degree of
control
Taxes, Demands
for services
Services with health
effects
Subsidies,
Information,
Ideologies
Potential personnel,
money, data
Schemes for
interpreting human
experience
Formal health services
Community participation
Competition for
responsibilities and
resources
Human resources, Payment
mechanisms, Scientific information,
Technology
Health systems are dynamic and
interconnected systems at whose heart are
people
‘It is the multiple
relationships and
interactions among the
building blocks ... that
convert these blocks into
a system’
de Savigny & Adam, 2009
People
governance
Information
financing
service delivery
human resources
medicines &
technology
‘Health system’ as a focus
in global health …
• Not new ...
… but
• in a ‘see-saw’ with focus on disease
control programmes
Changing global trends in thinking about
how to improve health systems
• 1970s: whole system focus > comprehensive PHC,
Alma Ata 1978
• 1980s: focus on interventions > selective PHC,
GOBI-FFF
• 1990s: health system reform – focus on overall
financing+organisation (efficiency+equity)
• mid-1990s–2000s: focus on priority diseases, e.g.
HIV/AIDS > Global Fund plus
• 2000s: health system strengthening
2000s move towards health systems
strengthening because …
‘Effective interventions exist for many priority health
problems in low income countries; prices are falling, and
funds are increasing. However, progress towards
agreed health goals remains slow. There is increasing
consensus that stronger health systems are key to
achieving improved health outcomes.’
Travis et al., 2004
Health system strengthening goes beyond dedicated
disease/condition-specific programmes
Travis et al., 2004
Whole system change: achieving good health at low cost
Good governance, effective
institutions and bureaucracies,
planning and leadership e.g. Thai case:
use of evidence in
decision making
Fair and
sustainable
financing
Effective primary care as entry point to referral network
New cadres, large numbers, new roles; payment mechanisms (values)
Drug supply, low cost technologies (ORS)
PHC
UHC
Balabanova et al., 2011
Why and how sustained action over time?
Hardware
interventions to
tackle access
barriers
Software:
values-driven &
dedicated
health
professionals
How and
why?
3) Decision-making processes that have ensured consistent vision and persistent development towards goals
How and
why?
1) HS features:1. public sector
strengthened
2. integrated service
provision
3. limited reliance
on external
resources
1. Values-based and
charismatic political
leadership
2. Elite and interest
groups support
3. Competent, values-
based and
distributed technical
leadership
4. Generation and use
of evidence in
decision-making
5. Decentralised
authority
6. Flexible
implementation
7. Communication and
feedback, learning
through doing
2) Community
factors: 1. community
awareness &
acceptance of
health
programmes
2. public trust &
confidence in
DHS
3. public status of
health
professionals
How and
why?
Socio-cultural values;
positive experiences
Pro-poor, pro-
rural ideology
How and
why?
Pro-poor ideology; Use of
evidence; Economic context
Health system
Polices are more than documents!
Not just the output of
decision making but rather
the entire process of
decision-making across the
full range of people and
organisations that translate
policy
documents/statements into
policy-as-experienced
• It is important to understand:
– the politics of influencing
‘policy agendas’
and
– the organisational
dynamics through which
policies take effect:
actors, relationships
and driving forces
• The US: Obamacare
• The UK:
– born out of a political moment
• with particular underpinning values
– but undergone endless reforms over its life
• Could current changes compromise
initial values?
• Will they improve system performance?
Copyright
Funding
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Citation of this work must follow normal academic
conventions. Suggested citation:
Introduction to Health Policy and Systems Research,
course presentation, Presentation 2. Copyright
CHEPSAA (Consortium for Health Policy & Systems
Analysis in Africa) 2014, www.hpsa-africa.org
www.slideshare.net/hpsa_africa
This document is an output from a project funded by the European Commission (EC) FP7-Africa (Grant no.
265482). The views expressed are not necessarily those of the EC.
The CHEPSAA partners
University of Dar Es SalaamInstitute of Development Studies
University of the WitwatersrandCentre for Health Policy
University of GhanaSchool of Public Health, Department of Health Policy, Planning and Management
University of LeedsNuffield Centre for International Health and Development
University of Nigeria Enugu Health Policy Research Group & the Department of Health Administration and Management
London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineHealth Economics and Systems Analysis Group, Depart of Global Health & Dev.
Great Lakes University of KisumuTropical Institute of Community Health and Development
Karolinska InstitutetHealth Systems and Policy Group, Department of Public Health Sciences
University of Cape TownHealth Policy and Systems Programme, Health Economics Unit
Swiss Tropical and Public Health InstituteHealth Systems Research Group
University of the Western CapeSchool of Public Health