| Literature DB >> 29739421 |
Tim Mercer1, Adrian Gardner2,3, Benjamin Andama4, Cleophas Chesoli4, Astrid Christoffersen-Deb5,6, Jonathan Dick2,3, Robert Einterz2, Nick Gray7, Sylvester Kimaiyo3, Jemima Kamano3, Beryl Maritim4, Kirk Morehead7, Sonak Pastakia8,9, Laura Ruhl10,11, Julia Songok11, Jeremiah Laktabai12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH) has been a model academic partnership in global health for nearly three decades, leveraging the power of a public-sector academic medical center and the tripartite academic mission - service, education, and research - to the challenges of delivering health care in a low-income setting. Drawing our mandate from the health needs of the population, we have scaled up service delivery for HIV care, and over the last decade, expanded our focus on non-communicable chronic diseases, health system strengthening, and population health more broadly. Success of such a transformative endeavor requires new partnerships, as well as a unification of vision and alignment of strategy among all partners involved. Leveraging the Power of Partnerships and Spreading the Vision for Population Health. We describe how AMPATH built on its collective experience as an academic partnership to support the public-sector health care system, with a major focus on scaling up HIV care in western Kenya, to a system poised to take responsibility for the health of an entire population. We highlight global trends and local contextual factors that led to the genesis of this new vision, and then describe the key tenets of AMPATH's population health care delivery model: comprehensive, integrated, community-centered, and financially sustainable with a path to universal health coverage. Finally, we share how AMPATH partnered with strategic planning and change management experts from the private sector to use a novel approach called a 'Learning Map®' to collaboratively develop and share a vision of population health, and achieve strategic alignment with key stakeholders at all levels of the public-sector health system in western Kenya.Entities:
Keywords: Global Health; Health care delivery system; Kenya; Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs); Partnerships; Population health; Strategy; Vision
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29739421 PMCID: PMC5941561 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-018-0366-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Responding to Population Health Needs: AMPATH Accomplishments in Service Delivery
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| • Moi University School of Medicine curriculum is developed, with a focus on rural and community-based health care, embodied in their Community-Based Education and Service (COBES) program |
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| • In 2001, the first patient at MTRH is treated with anti-retroviral therapy, launching AMPATH (The Academic Model for the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS). Over the years, AMPATH has received three cycles of USAID-PEPFAR funding for HIV care, with over 150,000 patients enrolled and 85,000 active on anti-retroviral therapy delivered at nearly 500 MOH-supported clinics across western Kenya. Moi University is the first African institution to be the prime grantee recipient of this type of funding |
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| • AMPATH changes its name to reflect its broader population health mission, now called The Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare |
Fig. 1MOH-AMPATH Population Health Care Delivery Model
Fig. 2The Population Health Learning Map Experience
Fig. 3Population Health Learning Map delivered to stakeholders at all levels of the health care system