| Literature DB >> 32090729 |
Fariza Fadzil1, Safurah Jaafar2, Rohana Ismail1.
Abstract
This paper illustrates the development of Primary Health Care (PHC) public sector in Malaysia, through a series of health reforms in addressing equitable access. Malaysia was a signatory to the Alma Ata Declaration in 1978. The opportunity provided the impetus to expand the Rural Health Services of the 1960s, guided by the principles of PHC which attempts to address the urban-rural divide to improve equity and accessibility. The review was made through several collation of literature searches from published and unpublished research papers, the Ministry of Health annual reports, the 5-year Malaysia Plans, National Statistics Department, on health systems programme and infrastructure developments in Malaysia. The Public Primary Care Health System has evolved progressively through five phases of organisational reforms and physical restructuring. It responded to growing needs over a 40-year period since the Alma Ata Declaration in 1978, keeping equity, accessibility, efficiency and universal health coverage consistently in the backdrop. There were improvements of maternal, infant mortality rates as well as accessibility to health services for the population. The PHC Reforms in Malaysia are the result of structured and strategic investment. However, there will be continuing dilemma between cost-effectiveness and equity. Hence, continuous efforts are required to look at opportunity costs of alternative strategies to provide the best available solution given the available resources and capacities. While recognising that health systems development is complex with several layers and influencing factors, this paper focuses on a small but crucial aspect that occupies much time and energies of front-line managers in the health.Entities:
Keywords: PHC infrastructure; access; equity; universal health coverage; urban–rural divide
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32090729 PMCID: PMC7054816 DOI: 10.1017/S146342362000002X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prim Health Care Res Dev ISSN: 1463-4236 Impact factor: 1.458
Maternal health coverage in Malaysia, selected years 1990–2014
| 1990 | 2000 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimated number of pregnant mothers | 676 382 | 691 664 | 587 479 | 565 072 | 580 536 | 592 489 | 592 489 |
| Antenatal coverage | 528 029, 78.1% | 517 138, 74.8% | 483 136, 82.2% | 550 104, 97.3% | 560 323, 96.5% | 580 819, 98.0% | 575 604, 97.2% |
| Average ante-natal visits per mother | 6.6 | 8.5 | 10.4 | 9.8 | 10.0 | 9.9 | 10.6 |
Source: MOH Annual Report 2014.
Figure 1.PHC team.
Figure 2.Outpatient attendances in health clinics (new and repeat) 2005–2014.
Figure 3.Increasing scope of services with introduction of new activities.
Figure 4 and Box 1.The reviewed approach of PHC and WISE components.
Health clinic type with estimated coverage area population and estimated daily patients’ attendances
| Types of health | Scope of services provided | Estimated population in coverage area based on (catchment population) | Estimated patients’ attendances daily |
|---|---|---|---|
| KK2 | Outpatient, maternal and child, rehabilitation, x-ray, laboratory, dental health | >50 000 | >800 |
| KK3 | Outpatient, maternal and child, rehabilitation, x-ray, laboratory, dental health | >30 000 – 50 000 | >500–800 |
| KK4 | Outpatient, maternal and child, rehabilitation, x-ray, laboratory, dental health | >2 000–30 000 | >300–500 |
| KK5 | Outpatient, maternal and child, x-ray, laboratory, dental health | >10 000–20 000 | >150–300 |
| KK6 | Outpatient, maternal and child, laboratory, dental health, alternative birthing centre and observation beds (optional) | >5000–10 000 | >100–150 |
| KK7 | Outpatient, maternal and child, laboratory, alternative birthing centre and observation beds (optional) | <5000 | >50–100 |
Source: Planning Division and Family Health Development Division, MOH 2015.
Figure 5.Type of clinics and the corresponding scope of services.
Ratio of health facilities to population, year 1975 compared with year 2015
| Types of clinics1 | Year 19751 | Population to clinic1 | Types of clinics[ | Year 2015[ | Population to clinic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main health centre | 62 | 112 900 | Health clinics | 991 | 31 988[ |
| Sub-centre | 239 | 23 250 | – | – | |
| MCQ | 1293 | 4390 | Community clinics | 1921 | 16 502[ |
| Total population | 7 000 000 | 31 700 000[ |
Source: 1Noordin RAA 1978,
Family Health Development Division, MOH, 2015.
Department of Statistics 2017.
Author’s calculation population divide by clinics.
Figure 6.Mapping population to respective zones.