| Literature DB >> 21806826 |
Ricarda Windisch1, Peter Waiswa, Florian Neuhann, Florian Scheibe, Don de Savigny.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Strengthened national health systems are necessary for effective and sustained expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART). ART and its supply chain management in Uganda are largely based on parallel and externally supported efforts. The question arises whether systems are being strengthened to sustain access to ART. This study applies systems thinking to assess supply chain management, the role of external support and whether investments create the needed synergies to strengthen health systems.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21806826 PMCID: PMC3161852 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-7-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Figure 1Major events during antiretroviral scale-up in Uganda.
Figure 2Fluctuations of number of new patients on ART and their causes.
Figure 3Antiretroviral supply system in Uganda, 2010. IDI Infectious Diseases Institute. JCRC Joint Clinical Research Centre. JMS Joint Medical Store. MRC Medical Research Council. MUJHU Makerere & John Hopkins University Research Collaboration. PIDC Paediatric Infectious Diseases Clinic. TASO The AIDS Support Organisation. * Some NGOs also deliver to government health facilities.
System effects of ART expansion in Uganda
| System Outcomes | Description of System Causes and Effects | Primary Sub-system affected |
|---|---|---|
| More people on ART | The country has rapidly expanded ART with a 50% coverage of those in need by the end of 2009. Effects include creation of demands that require the systems to sustain an appropriate level of care. | Service delivery, with knock-on effects on all other sub-systems |
| Supply shortages (essential drugs) and expiry (ARVs) | Little investments in strengthening supply systems for essential drugs, lack of qualified staff leading. Effects include poor health outcomes, inefficiencies, financial and credibility losses. | Technologies, with knock-on effects on all other sub-systems |
| New supply chain management systems and governance structures for ART | Interest for short-term targets easier achieved through parallel systems. New structures and interests difficult to readjust later on. Effects include poor outcomes, vicious circles between weak systems and vertical approaches. | Governance, Technologies, Information, as well as the other sub-systems |
| ART program related mismanagement | Partly due to lack of absorptive capacity for rapid and large funding. Effects include misappropriation, withdrawal of funding, inefficiencies. | Governance, with knock-on effects on all other sub-systems |
| Brain drain, lack of qualified and motivated staff | Focus on short-term trainings, lack of training, higher salaries and other incentives within disease-specific programs compared to the public sector | Human Resources, knock-on effects on all sub-systems |
| Lack of appropriate data | Parallel, partly inefficient as well as unfeasible programme specific information systems. Effects include failure to focus on one national information system that meets quality standards, inefficiencies, superfluous tasks at facility level. | Information, knock-on effects on all sub-systems |
Figure 4System dynamics of supply chain management for ART.