| Literature DB >> 20500857 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Through the nearly three decades that have passed since the Alma Ata conference on Primary Health Care, a wide range of global health initiatives and ideas have been advocated to improve the health of people living in developing countries. The issues raised in the Primary Health Care concept, the Structural Adjustment Programmes and the Health Sector Reforms have all influenced health service delivery. Increasingly however, health systems in developing countries are being described as having collapsed Do the advocated frameworks contribute to this collapse through not adequately including population trust as a determinant of the revival of health services, or are they primarily designed to satisfy the values of other actors within the health care system? This article argues there is an urgent need to challenge common thinking on health care provision under extreme resource scarcity.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20500857 PMCID: PMC2891741 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4505-8-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Figure 1The policy implementation flow illustrating the main links between the various implementation levels.
Figure 2Qualified EmOC facilities of all facilities in the 6 study districts with distribution of qualified BEmOC personnel.
Distribution of qualified human resources across urban rural districts, health service levels and population.
| Average qualified BEmOC staff per | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dispensary | Health Center | First Referral Hospital | Average qualified CEmOC staff per First Referral Hospital | Population per qualified BEmOC staff | Population per qualified CEmOC staff | |
| Urban | 4.0 | 8.9 | 13.7 | 1.7 | 626 | 7413 |
| Rural | 1.6 | 5.6 | 39.0 | 2.6 | 1949 | 47416 |
| National standards | 2 | 4 | ||||
The table shows the adequacy of qualified BEmOC health personnel at health center levels and above, and the inadequacy of qualified BEmOC health personnel at dispensary level in rural districts. The table also shows large variations in the distribution of qualified staff across the districts.
Figure 3Actual compared to expected deliveries and complicated deliveries in urban and rural areas.
Post Alma Ata developments versus new mechanisms for securing trust in health care in developing countries.
| Post Alma Ata developments | Mechanisms for securing trust |
|---|---|
| Post Alma Ata narrow focus on interventions by researchers and policy makers leaves services non-prioritized | Priority to services rather than interventions |
| Priority to vertical programmes has contributed to a collapse of horizontal services | Includes horizontal services |
| Vertical programmes easily deteriorate existing health services and create large transaction costs at higher levels | Aims at synergy between essential vertical programmes and generalized horizontal services |
| A policy focus primarily on prevention has led to a deterioration of curative services | Higher priority to clinical curative services |
| Prevention interventions often health expert driven | Maintains focus on citizens and implementers opinions |
| Maintains relevant preventive activities, with higher emphasis on their relevance to other sectors | |
| Frameworks have almost focused on quantity and coverage before quality | Higher priority to quality assurance mechanisms |
| Isolated focus on quantity is not pro-poor | Securing quality before increasing coverage |
| Vertical programmes easily funded and researched due to easily identifiable objectives and quantifiable results | Maintains a dynamic and incremental focus aimed at describing complex structures and continuous improvement |
| PHC based on social justice principles without adequate focus on availability of resources and tools to ensure implementation and social support | Priority setting in response to available resources |
| Providers not accountable to patients and the public | Aims at increasing accountability to all affected parties through deliberative processes and transparent decision making |
Figure 4Changes to policy weight now given to services, preventive interventions and curative interventions during the Primary Health Care and post Primary Health Care eras in contrast to the policy weight proposed by a Service Focused Health Care framework.