| Literature DB >> 22929308 |
Joses Muthuri Kirigia1, Eyob Zere, James Akazili.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The 58th World Health Assembly and 56th WHO Regional Committee for Africa adopted resolutions urging Member States to ensure that health financing systems included a method for prepayment to foster financial risk sharing among the population and avoid catastrophic health-care expenditure. The Regional Committee asked countries to strengthen or develop comprehensive health financing policies. This paper presents the findings of a survey conducted among senior staff of selected Eritrean ministries and agencies to elicit views on some of the elements likely to be part of a national health financing policy.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22929308 PMCID: PMC3517356 DOI: 10.1186/1472-698X-12-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Int Health Hum Rights ISSN: 1472-698X
Figure 1Health financing framework.
The key health financing related challenges
| Shortage (insufficiency) of financial resources | 4 |
| Shortage of skilled human resources | 3 |
| To develop a comprehensive HFP & start implementing it by phases | 5 |
| No insurance scheme | 2 |
| Majority of our population is below poverty line | 2 |
| No experience on revolving fund or retention of fund at service giving site | 2 |
| Facilities - hospitals not prepared to immediately take off the financing system. Poor management of resources is not to be denied. | 1 |
| Poor referral mechanism | 1 |
| Inefficient use of available funds | 1 |
| Unavailability of health planning office | 1 |
| Discouraging incentives | 1 |
| Absence of a SWAP for coordinating partner contributions | 1 |
| Dearth of administrative and monitoring procedures | 2 |
| Increasing cost of medication & awareness of medical facilities | 1 |
Existing local opportunities to strengthen health financing system
| High government commitment | 4 |
| Community participation | 4 |
| Infrastructure (good hospitals with equipment & staff who can provide quality care) | 2 |
| Immediate need for reform of the hospital services | 1 |
| MOF should allow hospitals to use certain percentage of their revenue in hospital management | 1 |
| Introduction of cost sharing | 1 |
| Around 20% of the population is public servant with defined remuneration (payroll) | 1 |
| Willingness to pay is there for any good service expected | 4 |
| Free of corruption system | 1 |
| Tradition of paying tax | 1 |
Key words or phrases for inclusion in the vision of the national health financing policy
| High community participation | 2 |
| Quality (+ continuous service improvement) | 4 |
| Equitable and accessible health services | 6 |
| Social Insurance | 1 |
| Hospital Autonomy | 2 |
| Hospital Financing | 1 |
| How the Ministry should operate at some point in the future and how the population of Eritrea shall benefit from the health care system | 1 |
| Pro-poor/Increased government funding for the poor and disadvantaged | 2 |
| Cost containment | 1 |
| Increased affordability | 2 |
| Pricing policy | 1 |
| Improved efficiency & reduce waste | 3 |
| Increased government funding for priority diseases | 1 |
| Preventive measures | 1 |
| Transparency | 1 |
| Ensuring provision of a basic health package to all Eritreans and increasing coverage of quality health care for the poor | 1 |
| For sustainable development invest on health | 1 |
Objectives of the national health financing policy
| To secure a level of funding needed to achieve desired health goals and objectives stated in the National Health Policy in a sustainable manner. | 15 |
| To ensure equitable financial access to quality health services | 13 |
| To ensure that people are protected from financial catastrophe and impoverishment as a result of using health services | 11 |
| To ensure efficiency in the allocation and use of health sector resources | 14 |
| To ensure that partner support for the implementation of the NHP is aligned, harmonized and coordinated | 12 |
| To ensure that provider payment mechanisms chosen create positive incentives for providing quality preventive and curative services, responding to non-medical legitimate expectations of service users, and containing the cost of health care | 11 |
| To empower providers to work towards privatization in phases | 1 |
| Ensure that the destitute part of the society has access to basic health services | 1 |
| May include exemptions for preventive and curative care for the segment of the population unable to pay | 1 |
Figure 2Number of respondents mentioning core values to guide national health financing policy.
Figure 3Number of respondents mentioning key components of national health financing policy.
Figure 4Number of respondents choosing revenue collection mechanisms.
Figure 5Number of respondents voting for provider payment mechanism.
Suggested members of the health financing agency board of directors
| Minister of Health | 16 |
| Minister of Finance | 15 |
| Minister of National Development | 13 |
| Chairperson of the Eritrean Confederation of Workers | 12 |
| Representatives of formal sector workers who are not unionized, e.g. government employees | 7 |
| Chairperson of the Association of Employers | 11 |
| Director of National Insurance Corporation of Eritrea (NICE) | 11 |
| Representatives of the Faith-Based Organizations that provide health services | 4 |
| Representatives of the private health care providers | 7 |
| Representative(s) of the rural workers (peasants) | 3 |
| Representative of the informal sector workers | 5 |
| Vice-Chancellor of the University of Eritrea | 1 |
| Chairperson of the Sector-Wide Approach (SWAp) or the health development partner community | 5 |
| Representative of the Medical Association of Eritrea | 11 |
| Representative of the Nursing and Allied Health Workers Association of Eritrea | 7 |
| Representatives of Eritrean women association | 1 |
| ERIPA | 1 |
| Minister of Labour & Human Welfare | 2 |
| Minister of Local Government | 1 |