| Literature DB >> 28709417 |
Aradhana Srivastava1, Devaki Singh2, Dominic Montagu3, Sanghita Bhattacharyya2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Person-centered care is a critical component of quality care, essential to enable treatment adherence, and maximize health outcomes. Improving the quality of health services is a key strategy to achieve the new global target of zero preventable maternal deaths by 2030. Recognizing this, the Government of India has in the last decade initiated a number of strategies to address quality of care in health and family welfare services.Entities:
Keywords: Abortion; Family planning; India; Maternal and newborn health; Person-centered care; Policy; Quality of care
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28709417 PMCID: PMC5513115 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4575-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Policy Triangle Framework. [adapted from Walt & Gilson 1994]
Responses to research questions based on our findings
| Research Questions | Responses |
|---|---|
| What was the socio-political, economic and health system context of the policy / strategy? | High population and high poverty ratio; disparity in development indicators; absence of well-defined hierarchy of public health centers in urban areas; inequity in access of health services; quality of care is a key concern in public health service delivery. |
| Were there any key groups / actors influencing policy / strategy formulation? | Civil society groups born out of the movement for reproductive rights in the 1990s influenced policy making significantly and added focus on quality, patient rights and dignity. |
| What was the process of policy formulation? | Text drafted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare after multiple rounds of consultation with governmental and non-governmental stakeholders; submitted to a Committee of Parliamentarians for scrutiny, placed on website for public feedback, and final draft approved for financial support by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs. |
| What were the objectives of the policy / strategy? Which key thematic areas were addressed? Were there any gaps in the content? | Objectives – to bring about fundamental changes in the healthcare delivery system with greater investment, decentralization and community participation. Thematic areas included improved planning, availability, access and quality of health services. Our analysis focused on the quality improvement theme. No gaps in content emerged in the analysis. |
| What was the implementation plan? | Public health standards were laid out and additional funding provided to help facilities achieve them. Quality certification body set up. District level system established for quality monitoring; non-governmental organizations and private sector engaged in the effort. Guidelines issued for ensuring quality of MNHFP + A care at all levels. |
| What were the challenges in implementation (such as cost, technical feasibility, acceptability among target populations)? | Persisting challenges included slow pace of structural improvements, availability of human resources and supplies, and lack of adherence to protocols. |
| Was the policy / strategy evaluated? If yes, then what was the achievement in terms of coverage, effectiveness and equity, among other factors? | No policy /strategy evaluations were available, though individual scheme evaluations and annual program reviews were available. Evidence showed that while financial incentives improved utilization, structural and human resource capacity could not be increased at the same pace, thereby affecting patient-centered care. |
Highlights of policy influences on MNHFP + A quality of care in India
| 1991 | Structural Adjustment Programme launched in the economy – curtailed public social expenditure; leads to rise in private sector health investment in India |
| 1992 | Launch of Child Survival and Safe Motherhood Programme; setting up First Referral Units for emergency obstetric care |
| 1992–93 | First National Family Health Survey held in India – collects in-depth data on maternal and child health |
| 1994–96 | The UN Conferences on Population and Development (Cairo, 1994) and Women and Development (Beijing, 1996) held – rise of reproductive rights movement |
| 2000–2005 | National Population Policy (2000) outlines RCH strategy & sets specific IMR & MMR reduction goals |
| 2005 | NRHM/RCH-II launched, leading to expanded funding and decentralized programme implementation |