| Literature DB >> 22008721 |
Miriam Taegtmeyer1, Tim Martineau, Jane H Namwebya, Annrita Ikahu, Carol W Ngare, James Sakwa, David G Lalloo, Sally Theobald.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Kenya experienced rapid scale up of HIV testing and counselling services in government health services from 2001. We set out to examine the human resource policy implications of scaling up HIV testing and counselling in Kenya and to analyse the resultant policy against a recognised theoretical framework of health policy reform (policy analysis triangle).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22008721 PMCID: PMC3212939 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Policy analysis of VCT scale up (adapted from Walt and Gilson 1994).
Key actors and their potential impact on task shifting policy
| Actor | Engagement with taskforce | Interest regarding scale up and task shifting policy | Potential support for lay counsellor testing* | Evidence of support or opposition to task shifting |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ministry of Health (central) | Limited but aware | Use existing salary lines: encourage task shifting | +++ | Agrees to meetings with all players |
| Ministry of Health (NACC) | Limited but aware | No significant engagement. Supportive if CBOs and NGOs using lay counsellors | + | National AIDS Strategy sets targets for scale up |
| Ministry of Health (NASCOP) | Convened taskforce in 2001 | Open as many sites as possible with wide geographic coverage | ++ | Provides enabling policy environment |
| Ministry of Health (provincial and district level) | Occasionally invited to meetings | Ensure quality of sites in districts | ++++ | Provides services and input practical advice into policy development |
| Laboratory associations | Individuals attend meetings on behalf of other actors (e.g. if working for a donor but also an association member). | Maintain quality of tests | - | Engages senior Ministry of Health officials and at times national newspapers to try to prevent task shifting |
| Counselling associations | Only one (of two possible) counselling associations engaged in taskforce | Recognition for counselling as a profession | + | Disagree with length and focus of training curriculum |
| Donors and their implementing partners | Provided driving force for taskforce establishment, including funds for secretariat | No funding for government salaries: encourage task shifting but varying approaches to incentives for lay counsellors | +++ | Funding to government directly to convene taskforce, collect data etc. |
*+indicates support of lay counsellor testing and - indicates lack of support
Figure 2Sample VCT newspaper headlines August and September 2003.