| Literature DB >> 33165587 |
Nahitun Naher1, Dina Balabanova2, Eleanor Hutchinson2, Robert Marten3, Roksana Hoque1, Samiun Nazrin Bente Kamal Tune1, Bushra Zarin Islam1, Syed Masud Ahmed1.
Abstract
Governance failures undermine efforts to achieve universal health coverage and improve health in low- and middle-income countries by decreasing efficiency and equity. Punitive measures to improve governance are largely ineffective. Social accountability strategies are perceived to enhance transparency and accountability through bottom-up approaches, but their effectiveness has not been explored comprehensively in the health systems of low- and middle-income countries in south and Southeast Asia where these strategies have been promoted. We conducted a narrative literature review to explore innovative social accountability approaches in Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Indonesia, the Maldives, Myanmar and Nepal spanning the period 2007-August 2017, searching PubMed, Scopus and Google Scholar. To augment this, we also performed additional PubMed and Google Scholar searches (September 2017-December 2019) to identify recent papers, resulting in 38 documents (24 peer-reviewed articles and 14 grey sources), which we reviewed. Findings were analysed using framework analysis and categorized into three major themes: transparency/governance (eight), accountability (11) and community participation (five) papers. The majority of the reviewed approaches were implemented in Bangladesh, India and Nepal. The interventions differed on context (geographical to social), range (boarder reform to specific approaches), actors (public to private) and levels (community-specific to system level). The initiatives were associated with a variety of positive outcomes (e.g. improved monitoring, resource mobilization, service provision plus as a bridge between the engaged community and the health system), yet the evidence is inconclusive as to the extent that these influence health outcomes and access to health care. The review shows that there is no common blueprint which makes accountability mechanisms viable and effective; the effectiveness of these initiatives depended largely on context, capacity, information, spectrum of actor involvement, independence from power agendas and leadership. Major challenges that undermined effective implementation include lack of capacity, poor commitment and design and insufficient community participation.Entities:
Keywords: Health systems; accountability; community participation; governance; social accountability approaches; transparency
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33165587 PMCID: PMC7649670 DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czaa107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Policy Plan ISSN: 0268-1080 Impact factor: 3.344
Definition of key concepts used
| Key concept | Definition | Source |
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| Corruption | Corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. It can be classified as grand, petty and political, depending on the amounts of money lost and the sector where it occurs |
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| Community participation | Involvement of people in a community in projects to solve their own problem |
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| Citizen’s Charter | Citizen’s Charters are part of the new public management approach and are initiated to encourage service providers to be responsive and to inform citizens about service entitlements, standards and rights |
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| Decentralization | Socio-political process of power-sharing arrangements between central government and local authorities in planning, management and decision-making |
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| Governance | The manner in which power is exercised in the management of a country’s economic and social resources for development |
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| Good governance | Exercise of power through institutions to steer society for the public good |
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| Public hearing | Formal meetings at the community level where citizens express their grievances on matters of public interest to public officials who try to address their grievances |
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| Social accountability | An approach towards building accountability that relies on civic engagement, i.e. in which it is ordinary citizens and/or civil society organizations that participate directly or indirectly in exacting accountability |
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| Social audit | A means of independently monitoring or evaluating the performance of an organization in attaining its social goal |
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| Transparency | A characteristic of governments, companies, organizations and individuals of being open in the clear disclosure of information, rules, plans, processes and actions |
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Keywords for searching electronic databases
| Corruption (combined with ‘AND’) (a) | Governance/accountability (combined with ‘AND’) (b) | Health sector (combined with ‘AND’) (c) | Geographic location (combined with AND’) (d) |
|---|---|---|---|
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Corruption Informal payment Anti-corruption Anti-corruption strategies |
Governance Good governance Accountability Social accountability |
Healthcare provider Healthcare service Health facilities |
WHO SEAR LMICS (Selected Countries) Bangladesh Bhutan India Indonesia Myanmar Maldives Nepal |
a, b, c and d groups were combined with Boolean operator ‘AND’.
Search protocol
| Scope | Synthesize evidence on good governance and social accountability approaches | |
|---|---|---|
| Search strategy | Inclusion criteria | Peer-reviewed journal articles, reports, programme documents, blogs and other grey materials; websites of relevant organizations and institutions |
| Language: English | ||
| Exclusion criteria | Countries other than WHO SEAR LMICs, beyond timeframe, documents in other languages, documents’ full text unavailable | |
| Timeframe |
January 2007–August 2017 (original search) September 2017–December 2019 (extended search) | |
| Search terms | Corruption, Governance, Social Accountability, Health Sector, Southeast Asia | |
| Data source | Electronic database | PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar |
| Grey literature | ||
| Institutional websites | WHO, World Bank, TI | |
Figure 1PRISMA diagram
Description of documents from two-phase search
| Type and theme of documents reviewed | Number of documents reviewed | Reference of documents reviewed | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systematic reviews | From initial search | From extended search | From initial search | From extended search |
| Governance and transparency | 3 | 1 |
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| Accountability | 3 | 2 |
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| Community participation | 1 | 1 |
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| Total review based articles = 11 | ||||
| Quantitative studies | From initial search | From extended search | From initial search | From extended search |
| Governance and transparency | 1 |
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| Accountability | 2 |
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| Community participation | 2 |
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| Total quantitative study based articles = 5 | ||||
| Qualitative studies | From initial search | From extended search | From initial search | From extended search |
| Governance and transparency | 2 |
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| Accountability | 2 | 3 |
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| Community participation | 1 |
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| Total qualitative study based articles = 8 | ||||
| Total number of journal articles reviewed (17 from initial search + 7 from extended search) = 24 | ||||
| Additional documents reviewed | From initial search | From extended search | From initial search | From extended search |
| National/international organizations project reports | 6 |
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| Case studies | 1 |
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| Working paper | 1 | 3 |
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| Blog | 1 |
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| Book | 2 |
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Total number of additional documents reviewed (nine from initial search + five from extended search) = 14.
Grand total of documents reviewed for this paper (24 journal articles + 14 additional documents) = 38.
Social accountability approaches tested across different countries in WHO Southeast Asia region
| Social accountability elements | Social accountability tools tested | Countries who tested the tools |
|---|---|---|
| Transparency | Citizen’s Charter | Bangladesh, India, Nepal |
| Online platform | Bangladesh, India | |
| Advice and information desk | Bangladesh, India | |
| Awareness campaign | Bangladesh, India, Indonesia | |
| Accountability | Social audit | Bangladesh, India, Nepal |
| Decentralization | India, Maldives | |
| Office of Ombudsman (e.g. Lokpal) | India | |
| Hospital management committee | Bangladesh | |
| Citizen committee/Monitoring group | Bangladesh, India | |
| Participatory complaints survey | Indonesia | |
| Community score cards | India, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal | |
| Citizen report cards | India, Maldives | |
| Complaint box | Indonesia | |
| Community participation | Public hearing, public dialogue, public theatre and campaign | Bangladesh, India |
| Patient welfare committee | India | |
| Village health development committee | Nepal | |
| School programme | India | |
| Community of concerned citizens/action group | Bangladesh, Bhutan, India | |
| Women’s group (NariDal) | Bangladesh |
Summarized key findings from reviewed documents
| Articles | Authors | Context | Scope | Intervention example | Evidence on impact |
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| Good governance and corruption in the health sector: lessons from the Karnataka experience. |
| Strengthening good governance and preventing corruption in health care are universal challenges. | To evaluate KLA experience. | The Karnataka Lokayukta (KLA), a public complaints agency in Karnataka state (India), was created in 1986 | Played a prominent role controlling systemic corruption only after a change of leadership in 2001 with a new Lokayukta (ombudsman) and Vigilance Director for Health (VDH). |
| Improving the implementation of health workforce policies through governance: a review of case studies | Dieleman et al., 2011 | Responsible governance is crucial to national development and a catalyst for achieving the Millennium Development Goals. | How governance issues have influenced HRH policy development and to identify governance strategies that have been used, successfully or not, to improve HRH policy implementation in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). | Evaluate a governance-related intervention at country or district level in LMIC. | The dimension ‘performance’ covered several elements at the core of governance of HRH, decentralization being particularly prominent. Although improved equity and/or equality was, in a number of interventions, a goal, inclusiveness in policy development and fairness and transparency in policy implementation did often not seem adequate to guarantee the corresponding desirable health workforce scenario. |
| Health sector corruption as the archenemy of universal health coverage in Indonesia |
| Health sector corruption is a direct threat towards achieving universal health coverage in Indonesia. | Health sector corruption is exemplified in the analysis of several national case laws. | Three Indonesian legal cases of health sector corruption were selected to analysis the reality of health sector corruption and its detrimental effect to right health. | Health sector corruption has directly reduced fund for universal health coverage in Indonesia. A people centred right based approach is needed to imply. |
| Good governance and anti- corruption: Responsibility to protect universal health coverage in Indonesia |
| The establishment of universal health care marks a new momentumfor the progressive realization of the right to health in Indonesia. | The problem of corruption in health sector endangers the sustainability ofeffective and quality health care, therefore, Indonesia established an anti-fraud system to protect the universal health insurance fund. | Analyze the current anti-fraud system in universalhealth insurance through the lens of international law and principles of good governance. The sociolegal approach is chosen to study therelationship between the State party obligations to international lawand the implementation of concerning universalhealth care and anti-corruption in the designated anti-fraud system. | Good governance principles are essential in designing an effectiveanti-fraud system due to the correlation between human rights and anti-corruption that both areas emphasize good governance principles as guiding principles for the realization of human rights and the making of potent anti-corruption strategy. |
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| Health worker posting and transfer at primary level in Tamil Nadu: Governance of a complex health system function |
| Posting and transfer (PT) of health personnel – is a contested domain, driven by varied expressions of private and public interest throughout the chain of implementation. | To investigate policymaking for PT in the government health sector and implementation of policies as experienced by different health system actors. | Case study of a PT reform policy at primary health care level in Tamil Nadu State, to understand how different groups of health systems actors experience posting and transfer. | The imperative of enforcing rules may need to be complemented with bottom-up policy approaches, including treating PT not merely as system dysfunction, but also as a potential instrument of governance innovations, procedural justice and the accountability of health services to communities they seek to serve. |
| Local self-governance in health-a study of it’s functioning in Odisha, India. |
| Local decision making is linked to several service quality improvement parameters. | RogiKalyanSamitis (RKS) at peripheral decision making health units (DMHU) are working to ensure accountability and transparency in governance, improve quality of services, and facilitate local responsiveness. | Perception of RKS members about their roles, involvement and practices with respect to local decision making and management of DMHUs. | About 87 % respondents were satisfied with their role in the local governance of the health units. |
| The Prospect of Accountability in Local Governance in Nepal |
| Government accountability is intrinsic to democracies, as citizens can choose public officials through their popular vote and accordingly exercise some control and oversight over the officials. | Accountability in local government requires attention not only to laws, but also the practices of civic interaction and the willingness of elected officials and citizens in these engagements. | Examines how to confront this challenge of holding the governments to account, by looking into local governance in Nepal, where citizens have limited knowledge of the government decisions, activities, procedures followed, and their outcomes. | There is a need to foster greater civic demands on accountability and foster measures for deliberation at the municipal level on a more regular basis. Overall, local government accountability should be envisioned as a work-in-progress pursuit and should be coupled with systems of local planning and implementation and vitalization of local democracy. |
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| An Evaluation of a citizen‘s charter in local government: a case study of Chandigarh, India. |
| The Citizen’s Charter, as one of the strategies of New Public Management, aims at providing quality services within a particular timeframe. | It has been introduced in local government with the view of enhancing the excellence of public service deliverance in a responsive, transparent and accountable manner, which in turn aims at increasing the level of satisfaction. | Studying the Citizen’s Charter being formulated by the Municipal Corporation Chandigarh, its implementation and effectiveness from point of view of the agency and as well from the citizens | Intervention was a sheer failure and mere copying of the document for sake of procedural formalities. The reason behind this failure is lack of political will, failure of advertising and poor participation of the people. |
| Citizen's charter and implementation failure: performance and local councils in Bangladesh. |
| Citizen's charters are tools of empowerment and governments of developing countries are increasingly moving towards adopting them | An analysis of the implementation of charters reveals useful insight on the challenges faced by developing countries in such initiatives | Implementation in local councils | A top-down approach adopted in formulating the charter further contributed to the ineffectiveness of the charter. Citizens found it difficult to access services and were dissatisfied with their quality. |
| Corruption in the Service Sectors: Revelation of a Pragmatic Explanation in Context of Bangladesh |
| Corruption is a burning issue of governance. Corruption is not only prevalent in political arena but also in administrative and judicial arena of the country. | Different corruption related activities have been ensued in Bangladesh at the course of many times. This research is based on corruption in the service sectors in Bangladesh. | It has scrutinized the overall scenario of corruption and irregularities in the service sectors in Bangladesh and finally it has examined the scenario and experiences of corruption and irregularities in the service sectors in Bangladesh. | To control service sector corruption appropriate monitoring and oversight mechanisms must be in place in each institution, transparency and integrity has to be ensured in the public procurement both with respect to large procurements, appointments, promotions postings and transfers in all institution serving public interest must be based on merit, expertise and experience an citizen's Charter has to be introduced, enforced. |
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| Health Governance at Local Level from Human Resource for Health Perspectives: the Case of Nepal |
| Evidence about effects of good governance in Human Resources for Health (HRH) is scant in Nepal. | The study aimed to explore the situation of health governance at the local level and suggest measures to address the HRH challenges. | Ninety health facilities. | Only 49 of the health facilities have properly displayed signboard, 42 citizen charter, 36 free health services and Information. Seventy two out of 90 health facilities have not displayed social audit reports and 80 (89%) of the health facilities have not maintained complaint box. The initiative of decentralized human resource management increased ownership at the local level. Nepotism and power exercise was frequently reported as a hindrance. |
| Decentralization and district health services in Nepal: understanding the views of service users and service providers |
| Within the decentralization framework of Government, the Ministry of Health (MoH) Nepal initiated the decentralization of primary care services closer to citizens. | Examine and understand the effect of decentralization at the district health service from the perspectives of service users and providers. | District health facilities. | Decentralization was positively associated with increased service access and utilization and improved service delivery. Problems described included three main areas: functions, functionaries and funding. |
| Understanding the effect of decentralization on health services: the Nepalese experience |
| Despite enormous progress in health globally, primary healthcare services in many developing countries are facing different challenges. | Assess the effect of decentralization on health services, and to draw general lessons which might help to develop appropriate strategies to improve health services in Nepal. | Decentralization in many countries, including Nepal, suggests a new form of service delivery. | Decentralization in many cases has improved access to, utilisation of, and management of health services. The effects on other performance dimensions such as policy, equity, quality and service effectiveness are poorly investigated. |
| Decentralized Governance, Corruption and Anti-corruption Measures: An Enquiry in Bangladesh Experience |
| Poor governance system characterized by fractured democratic polity, low level of devolution of power and prevalence of widespread corruption have been considered to be some of the critical structural constraints holding back Bangladesh from the path of inclusive and sustainable development. | Proper implementation of the existing legal provisions and regulations, strengthening the capacity of the local government institutions, improving the local public service delivery and embedding anti-corruption measures and movement have been considered to be the critical antidotes to curb corruption in the country. | Focuses on decentralized governance, corruption and anti-corruption measures intending to improve understanding of the relationships among these concepts in the context of Bangladesh. | There are mixed effects of decentralization on corruption and that the types, dynamics of corruption and impact of different anti-corruption approaches may vary in different decentralized settings. Effective decentralization of authority is yet to be established at the local level.Conflicting provisions regarding administrative authority affects the effective functioning of the governance of the local level institutions |
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| Use of a Balanced Scorecard in strengthening health systems in developing countries: an analysis based on nationally representative Bangladesh Health Facility Survey |
| Importance of collecting facility‐based data through regular surveys to supplement the administrative data, especially for developing countries of the world. | Health facility survey. | Score card was reported useful for monitoring quality in a health facility survey done in 80 upazila health complex (sub-district health facilities) in Bangladesh. | |
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| Resources, attitudes and culture: an understanding of the factors that influence the functioning of accountability mechanisms in primary health care settings. |
| Accountability mechanisms are governance tools that seek to regulate answerability between the health system and the community (external accountability) and/or between different levels of the health system (bureaucratic accountability). | Examines the factors that influence the functioning of accountability mechanisms and relationships within the district health system. | Draws out the implications for responsiveness to patients and communities. | Bureaucratic accountability mechanisms often constrain the functioning of external accountability mechanisms. It is important to limit the potential negative impacts on responsiveness of new bureaucratic accountability mechanisms. |
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| ‘Trust and teamwork matter’: Community health workers' experiences in integrated service delivery in India |
| A comprehensive and integrated approach to strengthen primary health care has been the major thrust of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) that was launched in 2005 to revamp India’s rural public health system. | Though the logic of horizontal and integrated health care to strengthen health systems has long been acknowledged at policy level, empirical evidence on how such integration operates is rare. | NRHM primary health care, India. | It shows that for health workers, the notion of integration goes well beyond a technical lens of mixing different health services. Crucially, they perceive ‘teamwork’ and ‘building trust with the community’ (beyond trust in health services) to be critical components of their practice. |
| Which intervention design factors influence performance of community health workers in low-and middle-income countries? A systematic review. |
| Community health workers (CHWs) are increasingly recognized as an integral component of the health workforce needed to achieve public health goals in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). | Many factors influence CHW performance. | A mix of financial and non-financial incentives, predictable for the CHWs, was found to be an effective strategy to enhance performance, especially of those CHWs with multiple tasks. Performance-based financial incentives sometimes resulted in neglect of unpaid tasks. Supervision and training were often mentioned as facilitating factors. Embedment of CHWs in community and health systems was found to diminish workload and increase CHW credibility. | |
| Auxiliary midwives in hard to reach rural areas of Myanmar: filling MCH gaps |
| Auxiliary Midwives (AMWs) are community health volunteers supporting the work of midwives, especially maternal and child health services in hard to-reach areas in Myanmar. | AMWs were able to provide essential maternal and child health services.90 % of the respondents expressed receiving no adequate supervision, refresher training, replenishment of the AMW kits and transportation cost. | ||
| Unlocking community capability through promotion of self-help for health: experience from Chakaria, Bangladesh |
| One mechanism to promote participation in health is through participatory action research (PAR) methods. | People’s participation in health, enshrined in the 1978 Alma Ata declaration, seeks to tap into community capability for better health and empowerment. | ICDDR,B implemented a project “self-help for health,” to work with existing rural self-help organizations (SHOs). SHOs are organizations formed by villagers for their well-being through their own initiatives without external material help. | SHO functionality increased improved organizational processes and planned health activities, while decreases in infant mortality and increases in utilization of at least one antenatal care visit occurred similarly in intervention and comparison areas, increases in immunization, skilled birth attendance, facility deliveries and sanitary latrines were substantially more in intervention than comparison areas. |
| Citizen Participation and Political Accountability for Public Service Delivery in India: Remapping the World Bank’s Routes |
| A state’s accountability to its citizens for public service delivery constitutes a central component of the democratic polity. | The linkage between citizens and some combination of elected political leaders and those they direct to provide the services. | Explores the paths these three routes cantake and their potential effectiveness in providing citizens a number of institutionalmechanisms to hold political leaders and public service providers accountable,improve service delivery, empower poor people and ultimately enhancewell-being. | Civil societies can directly addressing the state bureaucracy in seeking changes in how a policy is implemented. |
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| Preventing Corruption in Public Service Delivery in Bangladesh |
| According to all major global indicators of corruption, Bangladesh is one of the most corrupt countries in the world as per Transparency International according to its Corruption Perception Index (CPI). | The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) conducts public hearings at the upazila level for ensuring the accountability of public officials and also transparency of their work. | This study is based on the written complaints raised by 1440 citizens in 72 public hearings conducted by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) in Bangladesh. | TIB conducted a study of 13 public hearings with 195 respondents. The reasons for liking public hearings was that it created opportunities for making authorities accountable to citizens (75%) followed by the opportunity to raise complaints before officials (69%) and commitment to solve complaints (20%). |
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| Women in the lead monitoring health services, Naripokkho, Bangladesh |
| Naripokkho works in all the 64 districts of Bangladesh on empowerment and reproductive health and rights of women specially in rural setting. | To strengthen the accountability mechanism in the health service delivery mechanism among rural women. | NariDal a village health facility monitoring group by village women’s. | Helped to raise awareness on health rights and increase the use of health services in the village women by enhancing accountabilities in service provision at local health facilities. |
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| Local Governance: Accountable Public service in Indonesia |
| Challenges of equal access to quality services due to vast geographical area. | Increasing the accountability of the public sector, improvement of public services through civil society participation. | Complaint survey conducted by service units. | Citizens were more aware and empowered, there was an improvement in service provision; service users also had less complaint than earlier with regards to constraints in service provision. |
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| Making local health services accountable. Social auditing in Nepal’s health sector. |
| Nepal at local level, public health facilities across the country face daunting problems, including insufficient supplies of drugs and basic equipment, understaffing and absenteeism, and low level of accountability to local people. | Social auditing has been introduced on an increasingly wide scale to enhance citizens’ ability to participate in decision making about their health services at facility level. | In 2013-14, a total of 602 facilities in 45 districts (i.e. the majority of the country’s 75 districts) held social audits. | Social audits increased demand for services by informing people. Staffing shortages were fully or partially filled. The challenge of drug stock-outs and infrastructure problems with buildings and equipment were effectively dealt. On a broader scale, the social audit added value in such as giving facility in-charges opportunities not just to respond to questions and concerns, but educate local community members, |
| The role of social audit as a social accountability mechanism for strengthening governance and service delivery in the primary health care setting of Nepal: a qualitative study |
| Social audit is a mechanism used to hold frontline health service providers accountable. | Using the case of the social audit process in Dang District, Nepal, this study explored the role of social audit in facilitating direct accountability between service providers and community. | A total of 39 interviews were held with health facility operation and management committee members, service providers, district level health managers and non-government organization members. Reviews of records of social audit action plans were undertaken at 10 health facilities. | Participants reported that the social audit process was able to facilitate information provision/data collection, and provided opportunities for dialogue between community and service providers, but the provision of sanctions was found to be weak. While social audit had a positive role in increasing transparency, accessibility and quality of services, its effectiveness in addressing perennial governance problems was mixed. Manipulation of the participation process, falsification of information, and lack of authority affected the role of social audit in facilitating accountability. |
| Anti-corruption Measures in India: A Democratic Assessment | Social Audit is a tool with which government departments can plan, manage and measure non-financial activities and monitor both internal and external consequences of the department/organization’s social and commercial operations. It is an instrument of social accountability for an organization. | Assesses the impact of anti-corruption measures adopted in India since independence and seeks to find out why, despite a robust anti-corruption framework, these measures have failed to tackle corruption in the country. | A comparative review of different anti-corruption measures adopted in different countries done. | The bureaucratic nature of the audit team, lack of awareness among the people and minimum focus on social mobilization have been some of the main reasons for the ineffectiveness of social audit in India. Thus, the practical problem with social audit is that it is only concerned about the outputs of government policies and not about the outcomes. In other words it is mainly concerned with the numbers that are present on paper and not on the results, performance or actual achievements | |
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| Fostering good governance at peripheral public health facilities: an experience from Nepal. |
| To foster good governance in the health facilities by increasing the capacity of HFOMCs. | To make this local committee responsible for managing all affairs of the health facility. | Health Facility Operation and Management Committees (HFOMCs). | Health Facility Management Strengthening Programme was quite successful in strengthening local health governance in the health facilities. The level of community engagement in governance improved. |