| Literature DB >> 29788959 |
Sreytouch Vong1, Joanna Raven2, David Newlands3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the late 1990s, contracting has been employed in Cambodia in an attempt to accelerate rural health system recovery and improve health service delivery. Special Operating Agencies (SOA), a form of 'internal contracting', was introduced into selected districts by the Cambodia Ministry of Health in 2009. This study investigates how the SOA model was implemented and identifies effects on service delivery, challenges in operation and lessons learned.Entities:
Keywords: Cambodia; Contracting; Implementation challenges; Incentive; Special operating agency
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29788959 PMCID: PMC5964924 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3165-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Overview of different types of contracting
| External contracting: Contracting out | An external service provider is engaged through a contract to provide services with maximum control over the resources and how services should be delivered |
| External contracting: Contracting in | An external service provider is brought in to manage and operate service provision institutions with some control over resources and services arrangements |
| Internal contracting | Internal contracting is a form of relational contracting whereby responsibility is delegated to peripheral units under the same legal entity e.g. governments contract with public providers i.e. with autonomous institutions which remain under public ownership |
Fig. 1Evolution of contracting health services in Cambodia
1SOA status does exist. However, the Service Delivery Grant for SOA is re-designed and scale up across Cambodia, including the non-SOA districts
Special Operating Agency
| What is a Special Operating Agency? | Special Operating Agency (SOA) is a supply-side oriented mechanism developed from contracting and implemented by the Cambodian government through the use of government staff as contractors to improve the quality of health care services for people, mainly the poor and vulnerable. |
| How does it operate? | In each Operational District (OD) there are government guidelines for the delivery of the Minimum Package of Activities and Complementary Package of Activities. The SOA is given a degree of autonomy in making decisions about the best use of their human, physical and financial resources to deliver the highest possible quality of services, in the most effective way and to enhance performance and accountability through streamlining administration to be more transparent and responsive to people’s needs. The SOAs are able to hire additional workforce, conduct performance monitoring and evaluation, and provide performance incentives. With the conditions set in the contract and penalties involved in underperformance at SOAs, contract monitoring at these ODs takes place more rigorously and with clear criteria for determining level of performance, a feature not usually seen in standard ODs. |
| Sources of budget for SOA | A standard OD has two major income streams: the government budget and user fees. SOAs have these plus a package of budget from the Health Sector Support Program in the form of a Service Delivery Grant (SDG). This additional budget (approximately 40% of the total budget managed by ODs) is mainly used for performance monitoring and incentives. The Ministry of Health (MOH) signs a performance agreement with the Provincial Health Department (PHD), and the PHD in turn signs a services delivery management contract with the SOA. |
| Role of MoH and PHD | The MOH is responsible for timely allocation of funds, provision of policies and guidelines, and enforcement of health legislation, professional ethics and codes of conduct to PHD. The PHD takes responsibilities for providing SOA with financial resources and assistance in human resources and performance management. Under the service delivery management contract, the SOA is responsible for ensuring the management of resources at all facilities. The PHD conducts monitoring of the SOA, usually on joint monitoring visits with the HSSP monitoring team. The HSSP monitoring team includes an external agency. |
| Extent of SOA operation | Thirty SOAs were established by the end of 2010 and six more SOAs were introduced by 2013. |
Characteristics of the study districts
| District (province) | SOA | Previous contracting | Level of service covered | Geographical area | Population/number of health facilities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Memut (Kampong Cham) | Yes (2009) | • 1999–2002/3 contracting out managed by SCA | Primary and secondary care | Lower east plateau bordering Vietnam | 135,500 |
| Peariang (Prey Veng) | Yes (2009) | • 1999–2002 contracting-in managed by Healthnet International | Primary and secondary care | Central south plains | 193,500 |
| Samrong (Oddor Meanchey) | Yes (2010) | • 2005/2006–2009: performance contract supported by BTC | Primary care only | Upper North Mountainous | 219,000 |
| Bati (Takeo) | Yes (2010) | None | Primary and secondary care | Plain | 202,026 |
SCA Save the Children, Australia, BTC Belgian Development Agency, PMG Priority Mission Group
Fig. 2Framework for assessing impact of SOA in Cambodia (adapted from Mills (1998) & Caltadol and Kielmann (2016))
Fig. 3Average service coverage in SOA and non-SOA districts (2009–2012)
Reasons for increases in service utilization in SOA districts
| Key informants | Health managers and providers |
|---|---|
| Public have more trust in the SOA facilities | Improved public trust in health facilities – provide better quality of care (improved staff attitude and better treatment) |
| Facilities are now open for 24 h per day | Staff being available 24 h per day |
| Staff are more punctual and stay at facilities because of incentives attached to punctuality and availability of services | Outreach programmes have increased community awareness of the availability of and need for services |
| Staff have received more training since being in SOA and this has improved the services that they deliver | Clear contracts with targets for provision of services, incentives and monitoring in the SOA scheme |
| Low service fees because of HEF and CBHI |