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1.
Health Policy Plan ; 39(Supplement_1): i50-i64, 2024 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38253447

ABSTRACT

The often-prominent role of external assistance in health financing in low- and middle-income countries raises the question of how such resources can enable the sustained or even expanded coverage of key health services and initiatives even after donor funding is no longer available. In response to this question, this paper analyses the process and outcomes of donor transitions in health-where countries or regions within countries are no longer eligible to receive grants or concessional loans from external sources based on eligibility criteria or change in donor policy. The comparative analysis of multiple donor transitions in four countries-China, Georgia, Sri Lanka and Uganda-identifies 16 factors related to policy actors, policy process, the content of donor-funded initiatives and the broader political-economic context that were associated with sustained coverage of previously donor supported interventions. From a contextual standpoint, these factors relate to favourable economic and political environments for domestic systems to prioritize coverage for donor-supported interventions. Clear and transparent transition processes also enabled a smoother transition. How the donor-supported initiatives and services were organized within the context of the overall health system was found to be critically important, both before and during the transition process. This includes a targeted approach to integrate, strengthen and align key elements of the governance, financing, input management and service delivery arrangements with domestic systems. The findings of this analysis have important implications for how both donors and country policy makers can better structure external assistance that enables sustained coverage regardless of the source of funding. In particular, donors can better support sustained coverage through supporting long-term structural and institutional reform, clear co-financing policies, ensuring alignment with local salary scales and engaging with communities to ensure a continued focus on equitable access post-transition.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel , Health Facilities , Humans , China , Healthcare Financing , Policy
2.
5.
Bull World Health Organ ; 100(4): 276-280, 2022 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35386555

ABSTRACT

Problem: Political economy factors are important in determining the adoption and implementation of health policies. Yet these factors are often overlooked in the development of policies that have the potential to influence health. Approach: Political economy analysis provides a way to take into consideration political and social realities, whether at the community, subnational, national, regional or global levels. We aim to demonstrate the value of political economy analysis and to promote its wider use in technical programmes of work. Local setting: We provide examples from across a range of World Health Organization areas of work, including participatory governance, health financing, health taxes, malaria prevention and control, capacity-building and direct country support. Relevant changes: Existing examples of how political economy analysis can be incorporated into technical support demonstrate the variability of this analytical approach, as well as its potential to support policy progress. Applying political economy analysis within the specified programmes of work has enabled more contextually relevant technical support to enhance the likelihood of advancing countries' health-related objectives. Lessons learnt: Embedding political economy into technical work has many benefits, including: enhancing voice and participation in health policies; supporting the adoption and implementation feasibility of technically sound policies; and building capacity to incorporate and understand political factors that influence health-related priorities.


Subject(s)
Healthcare Financing , Politics , Health Policy , Health Priorities , Humans , Taxes
7.
Health Syst Reform ; 7(2): e1929796, 2021 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34402407

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 has shocked all countries' economic and health systems. The combined direct health impact and the current macro-fiscal picture present real and present risks to health financing that facilitate progress toward universal health coverage (UHC). This paper lays out the health financing mechanisms through which the UHC objectives of service coverage and financial protection may be impacted. Macroeconomic, fiscal capacity, and poverty indicators and trends are analyzed in conjunction with health financing indicators to present spending scenarios. The analysis shows that falling or reduced economic growth, combined with rising poverty, is likely to lead to a fall in service use and coverage, while any observed reductions in out-of-pocket spending have to be analyzed carefully to make sure they reflect improved financial protection and not just decreased utilization of services. Potential decreases in out-of-pocket spending will likely be drive by households' financial constraints that lead to less service use. In this way, it is critical to measure and monitor both the service coverage and financial protection indicators of UHC to have a complete picture of downstream effects. The analysis of historical data, including available evidence since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, lay the foundation for health financing-related policy options that can effectively safeguard UHC progress particularly for the poor and most vulnerable. These targeted policy options are based on documented evidence of effective country responses to previous crises as well as the overall evidence base around health financing for UHC.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Family Characteristics , Health Policy , Healthcare Financing , Pandemics , Poverty , Universal Health Insurance , Economic Development , Health Expenditures , Humans , SARS-CoV-2
12.
Bull. W.H.O. (Print) ; 98(2): 80-80A, 2020-2-01.
Article in English | WHO IRIS | ID: who-330833
13.
Health Syst Reform ; 5(4): 322-333, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31684816

ABSTRACT

Collective financing, in the form of either public domestic revenues or pooled donor funding, at the country level is necessary to finance common goods for health, which are population-based functions or interventions that contribute to health and have the characteristics of public goods. Financing of common goods for health is an important part of policy efforts to move towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC). This paper builds from country experiences and budget documents to provide an evidence-based argument about how government and donor financing can be reorganized to enable more efficient delivery of common goods for health. Issues related to fragmentation of financing-within the health sector, across sectors, and across levels of government-emerge as key constraints. Effectively addressing fragmentation issues requires: (i) pooling funding and consolidating governance structures to repackage functions across programs; (ii) aligning budgets with efficient delivery strategies to enable intersectoral approaches and related accountability structures; and (iii) coordinating and incentivizing investments across levels of government. This policy response is both technical in nature and also highly political as it requires realigning budgets and organizational structures.


Subject(s)
Budgets/statistics & numerical data , Efficiency, Organizational/standards , Healthcare Financing , Resource Allocation/standards , Humans , Resource Allocation/ethics , Resource Allocation/trends , Social Justice/trends , World Health Organization
16.
Health Syst Reform ; 5(3): 183-194, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31369319

ABSTRACT

Health financing reform is an inherently political process that alters the distribution of entitlements, responsibilities and resources across the health sector and beyond. As a result, changes in health financing policy affect a range of stakeholders and institutions in ways that can create political obstacles and tensions. As countries pursue health financing policies that support progress towards Universal Health Coverage, the analysis and management of these political concerns must be incorporated in reform processes. This article proposes an approach to political economy analysis to help policy makers develop more effective strategies for managing political challenges that arise in reform. Political economy analysis is used to assess the power and position of key political actors, as a way to develop strategies to change the political feasibility of desired reforms. Applying this approach to recent health financing reforms in Turkey and Mexico shows the importance of political economy factors in determining policy trajectories. In both cases, reform policies are analyzed according to the roles and positions of major categories of influential stakeholders: interest group politics, bureaucratic politics, budget politics, leadership politics, beneficiary politics, and external actor politics. The strategic responses to each political economy factor stress the connectedness of technical and political processes. Applying the approach to the two cases of Turkey and Mexico retrospectively shows its relevance for understanding reform experiences and its potential for helping decision makers manage reform processes prospectively. Moving forward, explicit political economy analysis can become an integral component of health financing reform processes to inform strategic responses and policy sequencing.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/economics , Health Care Reform/economics , Healthcare Financing , Universal Health Insurance/economics , Humans
17.
PLoS One ; 14(1): e0210563, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30699131

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In this study, we aim to establish the impact of the introduction of the Family Medicine Model patient satisfaction in the Turkish health system. METHODS: We use data on data 69,028 primary health care (PHC) patients over the period 2010-2012. We estimate the impact of the Family Medicine Model in panel regressions with province fixed effects, exploiting the sequential introduction of this health systems transformation across Turkey's 81 provinces. We use principal component analysis to reduce the dimensionality of the data from the European Patients Evaluate General/Family Practice (EUROPEP) patient satisfaction survey, to focus on the fundamental dimensions of patient satisfaction and to decrease the need for multiple hypothesis testing. We identified two key principal components. The first captured primarily information on satisfaction with provider behavior and the second on satisfaction with the organization of care. We then use these two principal components as outcome variables in our panel analysis to estimate the causal impact of the introduction of the Family Medicine Model. RESULTS: The Family Medicine Model significantly improved patient satisfaction across a range of dimensions. The coefficient results showed a positive and statistically significant impact (p-values<0.05) of the Family Medicine Model on the outcome variables representing the satisfaction dimensions clinical behaviour and the organization of care even after controlling for calendar time fixed effects. CONCLUSIONS: The introduction of the Family Medicine Model in Turkey, which was primarily aimed at achieving universal health coverage goals, substantially improved patient satisfaction. This study provides some of the first national-level evidence that the introduction of a Family Medicine Model can substantially improve patient satisfaction.


Subject(s)
Family Practice , Patient Satisfaction , Adult , Female , Geography , Humans , Male , Principal Component Analysis , Regression Analysis , Turkey
19.
Health Syst Reform ; 4(3): 214-226, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30081685

ABSTRACT

There has not been a systematic effort to synthesize findings of domestic fiscal space for health (DFSH) assessments, despite the existence of a commonly applied conceptual framework. To fill this gap and provide support to policy makers designing health financing policies toward universal health coverage (UHC), this study uses both qualitative and quantitative methods to assess the scope of possible sources of DFSH in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). First, the findings of 28 studies assessing DFSH in LMICs were reviewed. A quantitative assessment was then conducted to assess potential expansion from increased tax revenues, a greater prioritization of health in the overall budget, and improved technical efficiency of health spending in a sample of 64 LMICs. The analysis found that macroeconomic conditions and budget prioritization are the key sources of DFSH expansion in 90% of the reviewed studies. Improved efficiency was referenced as having high potential for DFSH expansion in 60% of the studies. The quantitative analysis converged with these findings and further confirmed that an increase in tax revenues is, on average, the largest source of potential DFSH expansion (95% confidence interval [CI], 60%, 96%) in the studied countries. However, even without injecting new revenues, reprioritization of budget and technical efficiency improvements could significantly expand DFSH (95% CI, 77%, 102%). While highlighting the critical role played by fiscal conditions and tax policies, the study provides strong rationale for explicitly incorporating efficiency as a core source of DFSH in a more systematic manner in future assessments.


Subject(s)
Developing Countries , Financial Management , Financing, Government , Health Policy , Healthcare Financing , Insurance, Health/economics , Universal Health Insurance , Budgets , Efficiency , Global Health , Gross Domestic Product , Humans , Income , Taxes
20.
Diagnostic et élément d’orientation pour le financement de la santé;2
Monography in French | WHO IRIS | ID: who-279651
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