| Literature DB >> 30950423 |
Devaki Nambiar1, Ruchita Rajbhandary2, Theadora Swift Koller3, Ahmad Reza Hosseinpoor4.
Abstract
"Leaving no one behind" is at the heart of the agenda of the Sustainable Development Goals, requiring that health systems be vigilant to how interventions can be accessed equitably by all, including population subgroups that face exclusion. In the World Health Organization (WHO) South-East Asia Region, inequalities can be found across and within countries but there has been a growing commitment to examining and starting to tackle them. Over the past decade in particular, WHO has been developing an armamentarium of tools to enable analysis of health inequalities and action on health equity. Tools include the Health Equity Assessment Toolkit in built-in database and upload database editions, as well as the Innov8 tool for reorientation of national health programmes. Countries across the region have engaged meaningfully in the development and application of these tools, in many cases aligning them with, or including them as part of, ongoing efforts to examine inequities in population subgroups domestically. This paper reflects on these experiences in Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Thailand, where efforts have ranged from workshops to programme reorientation; the creation of assemblies and conferences; and collation of evidence through collaborative research, reviews/synthesis and conferences. This promising start must be maintained and expanded, with greater emphasis on building capacity for interpretation and use of evidence on inequalities in policy-making. This may be further enhanced by the use of innovative mixed methodologies and interdisciplinary approaches to refine and contextualize evidence, with a concomitant shift in attention, developing solutions to redress inequities and anchor health reform within communities. There are many lessons to be learnt in this region, as well as mounting political and popular will for change.Entities:
Keywords: South-East Asia; equity; health equity assessment; health inequalities
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30950423 PMCID: PMC7115913 DOI: 10.4103/2224-3151.255342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: WHO South East Asia J Public Health ISSN: 2224-3151
Fig. 1Inequalities in coverage of seven essential areas of health service coverage by income group, urban versus rural location and level of education, across the WHO South-East Asia Region
ANC: four or more antenatal care visits; DTP3: diphtheria–tetanus–pertussis vaccination; PNC: postnatal care
Source: Monitoring progress on universal health coverage and the health-related Sustainable Development Goals in the South-East Asia Region: 2018 update. New Delhi: World Health Organization Regional Office for South-East Asia; 2018 (http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/274313/9789290226628-eng.pdf?sequence=6&isAllowed=y).[8]
Timeline of capacity-building and development of tools for health inequality monitoring and programme reorientation in the WHO South-East Asia Region
| Scope | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dates | Activity | Location/scope | National | Regional | Global |
| April 2013 | Health equity workshop | India | × | ||
| April 2014 | Health inequality monitoring workshop | India | × | ||
| November 2014 to 2017 | Development of Innov8 tool[ | Various | × | ||
| January to July 2015 | Development of HEAT[ | WHO headquarters | × | ||
| June 2015 | HEAT[ | United States of America | × | ||
| September to November 2015 | Innov8[ | Nepal | × | ||
| June 2015 to March 2016 | Development of HEAT Plus[ | Indonesia | × | × | |
| April 2016 | HEAT (Plus)[ | Indonesia | × | ||
| June 2016 | Innov8[ | India | × | ||
| December 2016 | Innov8[ | WHO headquarters | × | ||
| January 2017 | Health inequality monitoring workshop | Thailand | × | × | |
| February 2017 | HEAT[ | India | × | ||
| July 2017 | HEAT Plus launch | WHO headquarters | × | ||
| August 2017 | HEAT Plus[ | Bangladesh | × | ||
| December 2017 | HEAT Plus[ | Sri Lanka (with a delegation from Myanmar) | × | × | |
| January 2018 – ongoing | Subnational application of HEAT Plus[ | India | × | ||
| September 2018 | HEAT Plus[ | Nepal | × | ||
| October 2018 | Subnational application of HEAT Plus[ | Indonesia | × | ||
AA-HA!: Global Accelerated Action for the Health or Adolescents;[22] HEAT: Health Equity Assessment Toolkit;[12] Innov8: tool for reviewing national health programmes to leave no one behind.[19]