This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: The Republic of South ...HFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: TanzaniaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: ZambiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: IndonesiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: IndiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: MalawiHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Packages of Health Services: A Landscape Analysis in 24 EPCMD Count...HFG Project
In an effort to better understand what the EPHS are and what they are being used for in the EPCMD countries, USAID requested that HFG conduct an analysis to provide a “snapshot” for each of the priority countries. The activity results enable quick identification of the EPHS for the studied countries, allowing practitioners to identify cross-cutting themes, identify gaps, and better understand practical application of EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: The Republic of South ...HFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: TanzaniaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: ZambiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: IndonesiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: IndiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: MalawiHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Packages of Health Services: A Landscape Analysis in 24 EPCMD Count...HFG Project
In an effort to better understand what the EPHS are and what they are being used for in the EPCMD countries, USAID requested that HFG conduct an analysis to provide a “snapshot” for each of the priority countries. The activity results enable quick identification of the EPHS for the studied countries, allowing practitioners to identify cross-cutting themes, identify gaps, and better understand practical application of EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: PakistanHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: RwandaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: EthiopiaHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Jenna Wright
Published: July 2015
Resource Description:
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential package of health services that applies to every country in the world.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
The government of Ethiopia published its “Essential Health Services Package for Ethiopia” in 2005 (Federal Ministry of Health 2005). This package was published with the intention to have public sector facilities provide a minimum standard of care that fosters an integrated service delivery approach essential for advancing the health of the population. The major components of the Essential Health Services Package for Ethiopia are classified building on the Health Service Extension Program, which was launched in 2002 as an essential health services package at the community level, in recognition of the failure of essential services to reach remote communities in the country. By 2010 over 33,000 trained health extension workers were serving both rural and urban areas throughout Ethiopia.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: UgandaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: GhanaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Tanzania: Governing for Quality Improvement in the Context of UHCHFG Project
Since gaining independence in 1961, the United Republic of Tanzania has been politically stable and seen economic growth. In 2003, GDP per capita was 277 USD. It has increased to 955 USD. Tanzania has invested greatly in the public sector, including health reforms that embrace and encourage public-private partnerships and the decentralization of the public sector. The United Republic of Tanzania is composed of Tanzania Mainland and the State of Zanzibar, both of which have separate Ministries of Health, each with a cabinet minister. Tanzania has made progress in integrating quality improvement in their national strategic plan.
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare published the first Annual Report to the People on Health in September 2010. The report’s objective was to examine critical macro-level issues related to health, in particular, the constraints faced by the government in providing universal healthcare, and the challenges in the organisation, financing and governance of health services.
The report provides information about key health indicators such as life expectancy at birth, infant mortality and maternal mortality, and explains the variation in their numbers in different states. It also provides an overview of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), which was launched in 2005 to revitalise and scale up basic health services in rural areas. Besides this, it discusses the non-availability of skilled healthcare providers and their uneven distribution across the country, and suggests remedies for this problem.
Lastly, the report lists key policy issues related to health that, according to the ministry, need to be debated widely and drafted into a new health policy. Some of these issues are increased public investment in healthcare, public-private partnerships in the health sector, access to safe drinking water and sanitation, good quality education for healthcare providers, use of modern technology and technological audits of the sector, rising out-of-pocket expenditure on drugs, reduced emphasis on preventive healthcare, limited participation of community organisations, and investment of the states in primary healthcare.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Uganda: Governing for Quality Improvement in the Context of UHCHFG Project
In 2010, the Uganda Capacity Program conducted a situation analysis of quality improvement initiatives that identified there were many quality improvement initiatives, however they were mostly donor driven. Uganda had weak mechanisms to coordinate the initiatives at all levels. The National Quality Improvement Framework and Strategic Plan was developed to recognize the need to institutionalize, harmonize, and coordinate quality improvement and management interventions in the country. From this analysis, a quality improvement coordination structure was created to enhance and coordinate quality improvement policy, strategy development, communication, and capacity building activities.
Ghana: Governing for Quality Improvement in the Context of UHCHFG Project
Ghana’s National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was established by an Act of Parliament in 2003 (Act 650) to provide financial risk protection against the cost of health care services for all residents of Ghana. In 2012, the law was revised to address some of the operational challenges in management of the scheme. The object of the Scheme is to attain universal health insurance coverage for residents and those visiting the country.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: BangladeshHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Jenna Wright
Published: July 2015
Resource Description:
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential package of health services that applies to every country in the world.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
The government of Bangladesh first defined an “Essential Service Package” in 1998, then updated it in 2003 and renamed it the “Essential Service Delivery” Package. This package is defined at a high level, and includes: child health care, safe motherhood, family planning, menstrual regulation, post-abortion care, and management of sexually transmitted infections; communicable diseases (including tuberculosis, malaria, others); emerging noncommunicable diseases (diabetes, mental health conditions, cardiovascular diseases); limited curative care and behavior change communication; and nutrition.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: AfghanistanHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Jenna Wright
Published: May 2015
Resource Description:
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential package of health services that applies to every country in the world.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Afghanistan has a clearly defined EPHS, which includes a Basic Package of Health Services and an Essential Package of Hospital Services. The Ministry of Public Health first ratified the BPHS in March 2003, and revised it in 2005 and again in 2010. The purpose of the BPHS is to ensure that all primary health care facilities deliver a standardized package of basic services.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: PakistanHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: RwandaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: EthiopiaHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Jenna Wright
Published: July 2015
Resource Description:
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential package of health services that applies to every country in the world.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
The government of Ethiopia published its “Essential Health Services Package for Ethiopia” in 2005 (Federal Ministry of Health 2005). This package was published with the intention to have public sector facilities provide a minimum standard of care that fosters an integrated service delivery approach essential for advancing the health of the population. The major components of the Essential Health Services Package for Ethiopia are classified building on the Health Service Extension Program, which was launched in 2002 as an essential health services package at the community level, in recognition of the failure of essential services to reach remote communities in the country. By 2010 over 33,000 trained health extension workers were serving both rural and urban areas throughout Ethiopia.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: UgandaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: GhanaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Tanzania: Governing for Quality Improvement in the Context of UHCHFG Project
Since gaining independence in 1961, the United Republic of Tanzania has been politically stable and seen economic growth. In 2003, GDP per capita was 277 USD. It has increased to 955 USD. Tanzania has invested greatly in the public sector, including health reforms that embrace and encourage public-private partnerships and the decentralization of the public sector. The United Republic of Tanzania is composed of Tanzania Mainland and the State of Zanzibar, both of which have separate Ministries of Health, each with a cabinet minister. Tanzania has made progress in integrating quality improvement in their national strategic plan.
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare published the first Annual Report to the People on Health in September 2010. The report’s objective was to examine critical macro-level issues related to health, in particular, the constraints faced by the government in providing universal healthcare, and the challenges in the organisation, financing and governance of health services.
The report provides information about key health indicators such as life expectancy at birth, infant mortality and maternal mortality, and explains the variation in their numbers in different states. It also provides an overview of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), which was launched in 2005 to revitalise and scale up basic health services in rural areas. Besides this, it discusses the non-availability of skilled healthcare providers and their uneven distribution across the country, and suggests remedies for this problem.
Lastly, the report lists key policy issues related to health that, according to the ministry, need to be debated widely and drafted into a new health policy. Some of these issues are increased public investment in healthcare, public-private partnerships in the health sector, access to safe drinking water and sanitation, good quality education for healthcare providers, use of modern technology and technological audits of the sector, rising out-of-pocket expenditure on drugs, reduced emphasis on preventive healthcare, limited participation of community organisations, and investment of the states in primary healthcare.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Uganda: Governing for Quality Improvement in the Context of UHCHFG Project
In 2010, the Uganda Capacity Program conducted a situation analysis of quality improvement initiatives that identified there were many quality improvement initiatives, however they were mostly donor driven. Uganda had weak mechanisms to coordinate the initiatives at all levels. The National Quality Improvement Framework and Strategic Plan was developed to recognize the need to institutionalize, harmonize, and coordinate quality improvement and management interventions in the country. From this analysis, a quality improvement coordination structure was created to enhance and coordinate quality improvement policy, strategy development, communication, and capacity building activities.
Ghana: Governing for Quality Improvement in the Context of UHCHFG Project
Ghana’s National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was established by an Act of Parliament in 2003 (Act 650) to provide financial risk protection against the cost of health care services for all residents of Ghana. In 2012, the law was revised to address some of the operational challenges in management of the scheme. The object of the Scheme is to attain universal health insurance coverage for residents and those visiting the country.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: BangladeshHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Jenna Wright
Published: July 2015
Resource Description:
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential package of health services that applies to every country in the world.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
The government of Bangladesh first defined an “Essential Service Package” in 1998, then updated it in 2003 and renamed it the “Essential Service Delivery” Package. This package is defined at a high level, and includes: child health care, safe motherhood, family planning, menstrual regulation, post-abortion care, and management of sexually transmitted infections; communicable diseases (including tuberculosis, malaria, others); emerging noncommunicable diseases (diabetes, mental health conditions, cardiovascular diseases); limited curative care and behavior change communication; and nutrition.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: AfghanistanHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Jenna Wright
Published: May 2015
Resource Description:
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential package of health services that applies to every country in the world.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Afghanistan has a clearly defined EPHS, which includes a Basic Package of Health Services and an Essential Package of Hospital Services. The Ministry of Public Health first ratified the BPHS in March 2003, and revised it in 2005 and again in 2010. The purpose of the BPHS is to ensure that all primary health care facilities deliver a standardized package of basic services.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: KenyaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: NepalHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: LiberiaHFG Project
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS.
Strengthening Primary Care as the Foundation of JKNHFG Project
Central to the vision of JKN and the Government of Indonesia’s commitment to enhancing the health of all of its citizens is strengthening the role of primary care to prevent, treat and manage health conditions. How it is working, what the challenges are, and where might changes to regulations or operationalization of JKN contribute to strengthening the system so that JKN can achieve its goals. This brief focuses on JKN regulations at the primary care level, and shares insights into whether regulations are effective and how they are being implemented in a range of Indonesian contexts.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot Series: 24 Priority Cou...HFG Project
A new series of country profiles analyzes the governance dimensions of Essential Packages of Health Services (EPHS) in the 24 Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Deaths (EPCMD) priority countries. An EPHS can be defined as the package of services that the government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care.
The user-friendly snapshots explore several important dimensions of the EPHS in each country, such as how government policies contribute to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. There is no universal EPHS that applies to every country in the world, nor is it expected that all health expenditures in any given country be directed toward provision of that package. Countries vary with respect to disease burden, level of poverty and inequality, moral code, social preferences, operational challenges, financial challenges, and more, and a country’s EPHS should reflect those factors.
Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS. When available, this includes the country’s most recently published package; a comparison of the country’s package to the list of priority reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) interventions developed by the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health in 2011, and a profile of health equity in the country.
HFG Indonesia Strategic Health PurchasingHFG Project
The purpose of HFG Indonesia’s work in SHP was to support the National Council for Social Security (DJSN) establish a participatory process, supported by locally driven analytics, to assess the current institutional and regulatory foundation for strategic purchasing under JKN and propose options to improve this foundation as part of an upcoming revision of the presidential decree governing JKN implementation. The activities were implemented through a SHP Technical Working Group (TWG), which was supported by an analytical review of regulations supporting strategic purchasing in JKN completed by a researcher from the University of Gadjah Mada (UGM) and supporting capacity-building sessions for the institutions participating in the TWG.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
Botswana Health Accounts 2013-2014: Statistical ReportHFG Project
This methodological note provides an overview of the System of Health Accounts 2011 framework used for the 2013/14 health accounts (HA) exercise. It provides a record of data collection approaches and results, analytical steps taken, and assumptions made. This note is intended for government HA practitioners and researchers.
The Botswana 2013/14 HA exercise was conducted between July 2015 and September 2016. The study covers the 2013/14 fiscal year (1 April 2013–31 March 2014). In mid-2015, the HA team, with representation from the Government of Botswana, the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) project, and the World Health Organization (WHO), began primary and secondary data collection. Collected data were then compiled, cleaned, triangulated, and reviewed. Data were imported into the HA Production Tool (HAPT) and mapped to each of the System of Health Accounts (SHA) 2011 classifications. The results of the analysis were verified with the Health Financing Technical Working Group on 9 October 2016 and the Ministry of Health and Wellness (MoHW) management on 10 October 10 2016. Participants involved in the production and validation of the results, and recommended for future HA workshops, are listed in Annex A.
Essential Package of Health Services and Health Benefit Plans Mapping BriefHFG Project
Many governments are scaling up health benefit plans, such as social health insurance, to increase population health coverage. This brief presents findings from a mapping between the services covered under the country’s prominent health benefit plan(s) to the country’s Essential Package of Health Services. The mapping analyzes the extent to which the plan(s) cover essential services.
The National Health Mission (NHM) encompasses
its two Sub-Missions, the National Rural Health
Mission (NRHM) and the National Urban Health
Mission (NUHM). The main programmatic
components include Health system strengthening
in rural and urban areas, ReproductiveMaternal-Neonatal-Child and Adolescent Health
(RMNCH+A) and Communicable and NonCommunicable Diseases. The NHM envisages
achievement of universal access to equitable,
affordable & quality healthcare services that are
accountable and responsive to people’s needs.
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The Promise: CRISPR offers exciting possibilities:
Gene Therapy: Correcting genetic diseases like cystic fibrosis.
Agriculture: Engineering crops resistant to pests and harsh environments.
Research: Studying gene function to unlock new knowledge.
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Off-target Effects: Unintended DNA edits can have unforeseen consequences.
Eugenics: Misusing CRISPR for designer babies raises social and ethical questions.
Equity: High costs could limit access to this potentially life-saving technology.
The Path Forward: Responsible development is crucial:
International Collaboration: Clear guidelines are needed for research and human trials.
Public Education: Open discussions ensure informed decisions about CRISPR.
Prioritize Safety and Ethics: Safety and ethical principles must be paramount.
CRISPR offers a powerful tool for a better future, but responsible development and addressing ethical concerns are essential. By prioritizing safety, fostering open dialogue, and ensuring equitable access, we can harness CRISPR's power for the benefit of all. (2998 characters)
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R3 Stem Cells and Kidney Repair: A New Horizon in Nephrology" explores groundbreaking advancements in the use of R3 stem cells for kidney disease treatment. This insightful piece delves into the potential of these cells to regenerate damaged kidney tissue, offering new hope for patients and reshaping the future of nephrology.
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CHAPTER 1 SEMESTER V - ROLE OF PEADIATRIC NURSE.pdfSachin Sharma
Pediatric nurses play a vital role in the health and well-being of children. Their responsibilities are wide-ranging, and their objectives can be categorized into several key areas:
1. Direct Patient Care:
Objective: Provide comprehensive and compassionate care to infants, children, and adolescents in various healthcare settings (hospitals, clinics, etc.).
This includes tasks like:
Monitoring vital signs and physical condition.
Administering medications and treatments.
Performing procedures as directed by doctors.
Assisting with daily living activities (bathing, feeding).
Providing emotional support and pain management.
2. Health Promotion and Education:
Objective: Promote healthy behaviors and educate children, families, and communities about preventive healthcare.
This includes tasks like:
Administering vaccinations.
Providing education on nutrition, hygiene, and development.
Offering breastfeeding and childbirth support.
Counseling families on safety and injury prevention.
3. Collaboration and Advocacy:
Objective: Collaborate effectively with doctors, social workers, therapists, and other healthcare professionals to ensure coordinated care for children.
Objective: Advocate for the rights and best interests of their patients, especially when children cannot speak for themselves.
This includes tasks like:
Communicating effectively with healthcare teams.
Identifying and addressing potential risks to child welfare.
Educating families about their child's condition and treatment options.
4. Professional Development and Research:
Objective: Stay up-to-date on the latest advancements in pediatric healthcare through continuing education and research.
Objective: Contribute to improving the quality of care for children by participating in research initiatives.
This includes tasks like:
Attending workshops and conferences on pediatric nursing.
Participating in clinical trials related to child health.
Implementing evidence-based practices into their daily routines.
By fulfilling these objectives, pediatric nurses play a crucial role in ensuring the optimal health and well-being of children throughout all stages of their development.
CHAPTER 1 SEMESTER V PREVENTIVE-PEDIATRICS.pdfSachin Sharma
This content provides an overview of preventive pediatrics. It defines preventive pediatrics as preventing disease and promoting children's physical, mental, and social well-being to achieve positive health. It discusses antenatal, postnatal, and social preventive pediatrics. It also covers various child health programs like immunization, breastfeeding, ICDS, and the roles of organizations like WHO, UNICEF, and nurses in preventive pediatrics.
Struggling with intense fears that disrupt your life? At Renew Life Hypnosis, we offer specialized hypnosis to overcome fear. Phobias are exaggerated fears, often stemming from past traumas or learned behaviors. Hypnotherapy addresses these deep-seated fears by accessing the subconscious mind, helping you change your reactions to phobic triggers. Our expert therapists guide you into a state of deep relaxation, allowing you to transform your responses and reduce anxiety. Experience increased confidence and freedom from phobias with our personalized approach. Ready to live a fear-free life? Visit us at Renew Life Hypnosis..
Defecation
Normal defecation begins with movement in the left colon, moving stool toward the anus. When stool reaches the rectum, the distention causes relaxation of the internal sphincter and an awareness of the need to defecate. At the time of defecation, the external sphincter relaxes, and abdominal muscles contract, increasing intrarectal pressure and forcing the stool out
The Valsalva maneuver exerts pressure to expel faeces through a voluntary contraction of the abdominal muscles while maintaining forced expiration against a closed airway. Patients with cardiovascular disease, glaucoma, increased intracranial pressure, or a new surgical wound are at greater risk for cardiac dysrhythmias and elevated blood pressure with the Valsalva maneuver and need to avoid straining to pass the stool.
Normal defecation is painless, resulting in passage of soft, formed stool
CONSTIPATION
Constipation is a symptom, not a disease. Improper diet, reduced fluid intake, lack of exercise, and certain medications can cause constipation. For example, patients receiving opiates for pain after surgery often require a stool softener or laxative to prevent constipation. The signs of constipation include infrequent bowel movements (less than every 3 days), difficulty passing stools, excessive straining, inability to defecate at will, and hard feaces
IMPACTION
Fecal impaction results from unrelieved constipation. It is a collection of hardened feces wedged in the rectum that a person cannot expel. In cases of severe impaction the mass extends up into the sigmoid colon.
DIARRHEA
Diarrhea is an increase in the number of stools and the passage of liquid, unformed feces. It is associated with disorders affecting digestion, absorption, and secretion in the GI tract. Intestinal contents pass through the small and large intestine too quickly to allow for the usual absorption of fluid and nutrients. Irritation within the colon results in increased mucus secretion. As a result, feces become watery, and the patient is unable to control the urge to defecate. Normally an anal bag is safe and effective in long-term treatment of patients with fecal incontinence at home, in hospice, or in the hospital. Fecal incontinence is expensive and a potentially dangerous condition in terms of contamination and risk of skin ulceration
HEMORRHOIDS
Hemorrhoids are dilated, engorged veins in the lining of the rectum. They are either external or internal.
FLATULENCE
As gas accumulates in the lumen of the intestines, the bowel wall stretches and distends (flatulence). It is a common cause of abdominal fullness, pain, and cramping. Normally intestinal gas escapes through the mouth (belching) or the anus (passing of flatus)
FECAL INCONTINENCE
Fecal incontinence is the inability to control passage of feces and gas from the anus. Incontinence harms a patient’s body image
PREPARATION AND GIVING OF LAXATIVESACCORDING TO POTTER AND PERRY,
An enema is the instillation of a solution into the rectum and sig
Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot: Mozambique
1. ESSENTIAL PACKAGE OF HEALTH SERVICES
COUNTRY SNAPSHOT: MOZAMBIQUE
July 2015
This publication was produced for review by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
It was prepared by Jenna Wright for the Health Finance and Governance Project. The author’s views expressed in this
publication do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government.
2. The Health Finance and Governance Project
USAID’s Health Finance and Governance (HFG) project helps to improve health in developing countries by
expanding people’s access to health care. Led by Abt Associates, the project team works with partner countries to
increase their domestic resources for health, manage those precious resources more effectively, and make wise
purchasing decisions. As a result, this five-year, $209 million global project increases the use of both primary and
priority health services, including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and reproductive health services. Designed to
fundamentally strengthen health systems, HFG supports countries as they navigate the economic transitions
needed to achieve universal health care.
July 2015
Cooperative Agreement No: AID-OAA-A-12-00080
Submitted to: Scott Stewart, AOR
Jodi Charles, Senior Health Systems Advisor
Office of Health Systems
Bureau for Global Health
Recommended Citation: Wright, J., Health Finance & Governance Project. July 2015. Essential Package of
Health Services Country Snapshot: Mozambique. Bethesda, MD: Health Finance & Governance Project, Abt
Associates Inc.
Photo Hospital Rural de Buzi in Mozambique Sofala District. Mother and child in waiting area at Buzi Hospital.
Credit: Jessica Scranton
Abt Associates Inc. | 4550 Montgomery Avenue, Suite 800 North | Bethesda, Maryland 20814
T: 301.347.5000 | F: 301.652.3916 | www.abtassociates.com
Avenir Health | Broad Branch Associates | Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI)
| Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHSPH) | Results for Development Institute (R4D)
| RTI International | Training Resources Group, Inc. (TRG)
3. CONTENTS
Acronyms................................................................................................................... i
About the Essential Package of Health Services Country Snapshot Series ... 1
The Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) in Mozambique ................ 2
Priority Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Interventions..............3
Use of Selected Priority Services..............................................................................................3
How the Health System Delivers the EPHS..........................................................................3
Delivering the EPHS to Different Population Groups........................................................4
Providing Financial Protection for the EPHS.........................................................................4
Sources...................................................................................................................... 5
Annex A. Integrated Package of Services in Mozambique............................... 7
Annex B: Mozambique Health Equity Profile.................................................... 23
ACRONYMS
EPHS Essential Package of Health Services
JANS Joint Assessment of National Health Strategies
PESS Plano Estratégico do Sector da Saúde
RMNCH Reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health
4.
5. ABOUT THE ESSENTIAL PACKAGE OF
HEALTH SERVICES COUNTRY SNAPSHOT SERIES
An Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS) can be defined as the package of services that the
government is providing or is aspiring to provide to its citizens in an equitable manner. Essential
packages are often expected to achieve multiple goals: improved efficiency, equity, political
empowerment, accountability, and altogether more effective care. There is no universal essential
package of health services that applies to every country in the world, nor is it expected that all health
expenditures in any given country be directed toward provision of that package. Countries vary with
respect to disease burden, level of poverty and inequality, moral code, social preferences, operational
challenges, financial challenges, and more, and a country’s EPHS should reflect those factors.
This country snapshot is one in a series of 24 snapshots produced by the Health Finance & Governance
Project as part of an activity looking at the Governance Dimensions of Essential Package of Health
Services in the Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Death priority countries. The snapshot explores
several important dimensions of the EPHS in the country, such as how government policies contribute
to the service coverage, population coverage, and financial coverage of the package. The information
presented in this country snapshot feeds into a larger cross-country comparative analysis undertaken by
the Health Finance & Governance Project to identify broader themes related to how countries use an
EPHS and related policies and programs to improve health service delivery and health outcomes.
Each country snapshot includes annexes that contain further information about the EPHS. When
available, this includes the country’s most recently published package; a comparison of the country’s
package to the list of priority reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health interventions developed
by the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health in 2011 (PMNCH 2011), and a profile of
health equity in the country.
1
6. THE ESSENTIAL PACKAGE OF
HEALTH SERVICES (EPHS) IN MOZAMBIQUE
Mozambique has not yet adopted a formal EPHS, but vaguely committed to developing one in a recent
policy document.
Mozambique’s Health Sector Strategic Plan (Plano Estratégico do Sector da Saúde, or PESS) is the policy
document intended to guide the health sector towards universal health coverage through government
and donor cooperation. In 2013 the government of Mozambique published its third PESS, covering the
period 2014–2019. The document explained that the National Health Service has not yet adopted an
integrated EPHS. Instead, vertical programs financed through donors deliver the program’s specific
package of services through nonprofit facilities and public sector facilities, resulting in a lack of
integration in the provision of an essential package of services. A recent Health Policy Project report
also confirmed that Mozambique has not yet defined an EPHS (Dutta et al. 2014).
The PESS 2014–2019 committed the government of Mozambique to developing and implementing an
EPHS. Before the PESS became final, a team of international and national experts conducted a Joint
Assessment of National Health Strategies (JANS) review. While the draft version of the PESS mentioned
the intention to formulate and implement an “essential health package” (also referred to as a “basic/
minimum package of services”), the JANS report recommended better articulation of how the
government of Mozambique will operationalize the EPHS (International Health Partnership Plus 2013).
The final version of the PESS 2014–2019, while still vague, states that the government of Mozambique
shall develop and implement an EPHS for each level of service provision by the National Health Service
(public sector health care facilities) that responds to the health needs of the population and that is cost-
effective.
A newly defined EPHS may attempt to combine several different packages of services currently
implemented by vertical programs, such as RMNCH services provided through the U.S. government’s
Global Health Initiative. The Global Health Initiative states that the “Integrated Package of Services”
(which includes only RMNCH services) defined for this program was developed by Mozambique’s
Ministry of Health with U.S. government support (The United States Global Health Initiative 2010). The
PESS 2014–2019 explains that this maternal and child health package was defined by the vertical
program, but has not been adopted as the formal minimum package of services that each level of care
should provide citizens, which creates uncertainty, inefficiencies, and inequities. Therefore, based on our
analysis of official policy documents and external reports, the Integrated Package of Services does not
meet the definition of Mozambique’s EPHS. We included the Integrated Package of Services in Annex A
of this report for informational purposes only.
2
7. Priority Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and
Child Health Interventions
As Mozambique has not yet defined an EPHS, it was not possible to do a comparison to the priority
reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) interventions (PMNCH 2011).
Status of Service
in EPHS
Status Definition # of Services
Included The literature on the essential package specifically mentioned that this
service was included. Not applicable
Explicitly Excluded The literature on the essential package specifically mentioned that this
service was not included. Not applicable
Implicitly Excluded This service was not specifically mentioned, and is not clinically relevant to
one of the high-level groups of services included in the essential package.
Not applicable
Unspecified The literature on the essential package did not specifically mention this
service, but this service is clinically relevant to one of the high-level groups
of services included in the essential package.
Not applicable
Use of Selected Priority Services
The table below presents the country’s data on common indicators. Empty cells signify that these data
are not available.
Indicator Year Value Urban Value Rural Value
Pregnant women sleeping under insecticide-treated nets (%) 2011 46.8 30.2
Births attended by skilled health personnel (in the five years
preceding the survey) (%)
2011 80.3 44.3
BCG immunization coverage among one-year-olds (%) 2013 93
Diphtheria tetanus toxoid and pertussis (DTP3) immunization
coverage among one-year-olds (%)
2013 78
Median availability of selected generic medicines (%)—private
Median availability of selected generic medicines (%)—public
Source: Global Health Observatory, World Health Organization.
How the Health System Delivers the EPHS
Although Mozambique does not have an official EPHS, it is helpful to understand how health services are
delivered to the population. The National Health Service manages the public sector facilities at four
levels of service provision. Health centers and clinics provide basic primary care services. District-level
hospitals also provide primary care and serve as the first referral level. The third level of service
provision is at provincial hospitals, and the highest level of care provision is at national-level specialty
hospitals. Mozambique has a critical shortage of health workers, and the government has faced many
challenges in adequately staffing facilities. Additionally, the medical supply chain is quite weak, which
causes frequent stock-outs of drugs and lack of medical equipment (Ministry of Health 2013).
3
8. Private sector health provision includes for-profit clinics, usually centered in urban areas, and nonprofit
facilities managed by nongovernmental organizations and international donors. In general, the non-profit
facilities are part of vertical programs and focus on one or more program areas, particularly HIV and
AIDS and maternal and child health, which the PESS 2014–2019 describes as complementary to the
National Health Service.
Community health workers deliver basic services closer to the community. Traditional health
practitioners also provide care to many people.
Delivering the EPHS to Different Population Groups
See Annex B for the World Health Organization's full health equity profile of Mozambique based on data
from a 2011 Demographic and Health Survey.
Key findings from the health equity profile include:
Coverage of at least one antenatal care visit is just over 80 percent for the poorest quintile,
compared to nearly 100 percent among the wealthiest.
Full immunization coverage is 61 percent among rural residents compared with 75 percent among
urban residents.
Contraceptive prevalence (modern methods) is less than 10 percent among the lowest-educated
women compared to around 30 percent among the highest-educated women.
As the government of Mozambique has not defined a formal EPHS, it is not determined whether the
government's implementation strategy for the EPHS will involve specific population groups. The vertical
health programs in the country often focus on specific services for specific populations. The PESS 2014-
2019 discusses vertical programs for the following sub-populations: people living with HIV and AIDS,
adolescents, women of childbearing age, pregnant women, newborns, children, and seniors.
Providing Financial Protection for the EPHS
The government sponsors health insurance for civil servants.
National Health Service facilities are financed through the government's budget, international donors,
and from user fees for health services. Civil servants contribute 1.5 percent of their salaries to a medical
assistance fund. International donors provide funding for vertical programs. The PESS 2014-2019 states
that the government of Mozambique will develop a Health Sector Financing Strategy.
4
9. SOURCES
Dutta, A., N. Perales, R. Silva, and L. Criville. April 2014. Necessidades de Recursos Estimados e
Impacto do Plano Estratégico do Sector de Saúde de Moçambique, 2014–2019. Washington, DC:
Futures Group, Health Policy Project.
International Health Partnership Plus. August 2013. Joint Assessment of the Mozambican - Health Sector
Strategic Plan (PESS, 2014–2019).
Ministry of Health, Republic of Mozambique. 2013. Plano Estratégico do Sector da Saúde (PESS) 2014-
2019.
Mozambique: EquityProfile - Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Services. World Health
Organization. Accessed March 2015 at http://www.who.int/gho/health_equity/countries/en/
Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health. 2011. A Global Review of the Key Interventions
Related to Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (RMNCH). Geneva, Switzerland:
PMNCH.
The United States Global Health Initiative. 2010. Mozambique Strategy 2011–2015. Version 4.0.
5
14. Version 4.0
39
APPENDIX 4: CONCEPT AND STRUCTURE OF THE INTEGRATED PACKAGE OF SERVICES
In Mozambique, the Maternal, Neonatal and Child, morbidity and mortality reduction strategy addresses
the implementation of key effective interventions organized in packages across the continuum of care.
The continuum of care for MNCH refers to continuity of individual care, throughout the life cycle;
adolescence, pre-pregnancy, pregnancy, childbirth, post-partum, newborn and childhood care, and also
between places of care giving (including household and communities, outpatient and outreach services,
and clinical care settings). The Integrated Package of Services is defined to be delivered through
community and facilities channels to assure adequacy and quality of care throughout the lifecycle of
mothers, babies, and children.
The Guiding Principles of the Integrated Package of Services:
Ensuring universal access of basic lifesaving services, family planning (FP), Post-abortion care,
maternal and newborn and child health care, with special attention to the most vulnerable
groups
Ensuring women and communities participation in MNCH programs
Integration of MNCH services and reproductive health including HIV prevention, care, and
treatment
Pursuing social justice and poverty reduction to address health inequities
Facilitate the protection and fulfillment of human rights of women, men adolescents, newborn
and children
Respecting the basic values of choice, dignity, diversity and equality
Address gender and cultural sensitivities
The interventions/services are organized in 4 packages: Community package, Minimal package at the
first facility level, comprehensive package for the first referral level (2nd level of care), and specialized a
package for the 3rd and 4th levels of facility services. Table 1 outlines the type of package, the service
delivery point, and the cadre of health personal required for each level. Table 2 provides a summary of
the key activities by program area and Table 3 gives an illustrative list of key interventions/services for
each of the four packages by programmatic area.
15. Version 4.0
40
Table 1 -Summary of the Four Packages of Services, Service Deliver Points and
Providers
Package Service Delivery Point Level of Provider
Community
Community
Traditional birth Attendent
Agente Polivalente Elementar (APE)
Health Posts APE
Minimal
Health Posts
Elmentary Midwife
Elementary Nurse
Type II Rural Health
Center
Elementary Midwife
Elementary Nurse
Nutrition agente
Comprehensive
Type II Rural Health
Center
Medical Technician or Medical
Assistant
Basic Midwife
Basic Nurse
Basic Nurse or Agent
Type I Health Center
Rural
Doctor, Technician or Medical
Agent
Basic Midwife
Medical Prevention Agent
Basic Nurse
Type C URBAN Health
Center
Basic midwife
Medical Prevention Agent
Basic Nurse
Type II Urban Health
Center
Medical Technician
Basic midwife
Medical Prevention Agent
Basic Nurse
Type A Urban Health
Center
Doctor, Medical technician and
MCH Agent Nurse
Basic midwife
Medical prevention Agent
Basic Nurse
District Hospital
Doctor, Medical technician and
MCH Agent
Basic midwife
Medical prevention Agent
Basic Nurse
Specialized District Hospital
Doctor
Medical Technician
Obstetric Surgery technician
Obstetric Nurse
Laboratory Technician or Agent
Basic or Midlevel MCH nurse
Basic or midlevel nurse
16. Version 4.0
41
Rural Hospital
Doctor
Medical Technician
Obstetric Surgery technician
Obstetric Nurse
Laboratory Technician or Agent
Basic or Midlevel MCH nurse
Basic or midlevel nurse
General Hospital
Doctor
Medical Technician
Obstetric Surgery technician
Obstetric Nurse
Laboratory Technician or Agent
Basic or Midlevel MCH nurse
Basic or midlevel nurse
Provincial Hospital All cadres
Central Hospital All cadres
17. Version 4.0
42
Table 2 -Summary of Key interventions within the Integrated Package by Program
Program Area Level of the Health
System
Summary Key Activities
Reproductive Health and
FP
Community and
Facilities
Information education and communication (IEC) life style, Hygiene,
Nutrition, Immunization, delay first pregnancy, contraceptives,
STI/HIV prevention, peri-conceptual Iron and folic acid
supplementation, cervical and breast cancer screening, Malaria and
TB prevention screening and treatment
Pregnancy Community Health promotion, condom, hand –held cards and emergency cards,
ITN and Partum Preparedness
Health facilities Antenatal Care 4 visits (WHO guidelines), Nutrition Assessment and
care Iron and folic acid supplementation, Malaria prevention, STI
and Syphilis screening and treatment, deworming, PMTCT,
Immunization and TB screening
Childbirth Community Companion of choice, Earlier detection of warning signs, Infection
Prevention, clean delivery and Misoprostol,
Health Facilities Social support, Skilled attendance, Pantograph, Infection Prevention,
Basic and Comprehensive emergency Obstetric care, Management
of premature ruptured membranes , AMTSL
Postnatal Community Support for breastfeeding, care seeking for complication PPH and
infection, advise and provision of FP, Referral within 24 hours
Health Facilities + Initiation of ART, Treatment of maternal infection and PPH
New-born Community Oral antibiotic , skin to skin contact first hour , breastfeeding and
thermal protection, ART for PMTCT
Health facility Essential New-born care, Immunization and PROM initiation of ART.
Child Intervention Community and
outreach
Exclusive Breastfeeding, Vit A ,, ITNs, Case management of
Pneumonia , Enhanced Diarrhoea management , ORS, Zinc ,
Antibiotics for dysentery
Health facility Supplementary food , Immunization including Hib, case
management for Acute malnutrition , pneumonia, meningitis and
malaria
18. Version 4.0
43
Table 3 Illustrative List of Services/Interventions by Package Levels
Area Community Package Minimal Package Comprehensive Package Specialiazed Package
ADOLESCENTANDYOUTH
Information education and
comunication
IEC Promotion of Hygiene
Hands wash and environmental Health
Education for prevention alcohol abuse,
tobacco and other drugs
Immunization and Nutrition
Counseling for tetanus immunization
Nutritional education and Hygiene
Nutritional Assessment and orientation
Anaemia assessment.
Iron Supplementation and deworming
STI/HIV
Counselling on delayed sexual
debut and HIV prevention
Counseling and testing for HIV
Condom use
Awareness on STI signs
Endemic Disease
TB screening and Community Dots
Malaria prevention diagnosis first
treatment
Identification and referral of other
infection disease
Reproductive health
Health education on safe sex, FP, birth
spacing
Enable adolescents of both sex to
access the to various reproductive
health services through integrated and
linked services
Counseling and distribution of
contraceptive methods including
emergency contraception
Awareness of signs of domestic
violence and coerced sex
Information Education and Communication
Health Promotion and hygiene (oral, auditive,
ocular)
Immunization and Nutrition
Tetanus immunization
Nutrition Assessment counselling and care and
referral of acute and severe malnutrition
Deworming
Anaemia assessment and Iron and folic acid
supplementation.
STI/HIV:
STI screening (Syphilis , syndromic screening and
treatment of patients and their partners )
CT including PICT
HIV clinical WHO staging and referral
Referral of cases of Sexual violence for treatment
Endemic Disease:
TB screening and referral
Treatment for non-complicated Malaria and
others infection diseases referral for severe cases
Contraception and Breast and cervical
cancer screening:
Prevention of earlier pregnancy, oral
contraception, condom distribution and
emergency contraception.
Promotion of self-screening , clinical screening
and referral of suspicious cases of disease
Referral of women with HIV older 20 years old for
cervical cancer screening
Case management of early pregnancy
Initial ANC for teenage pregnancy
Post abortion care and referral for complicated
cases
Promote partner involvment
Information Education and Communication
and care;
Mental Health care for alcohol and drug users and
referral for specialized care.
Screening and referral for low school performance.
Treatment of Oral Problems
Immunization and Nutrition
Assessment and treatment of nutritional problems
and referral for severe problems s
Assessment of moderate anaemia and referral of
severe problems
STI/HIV:
Screening of STI and treatment
ARV treatment according to MOZ guidelines
Screening for Domestic violence and sexual assault
treatment and referral if needed
Endemic Disease
TB screening and treatment
Malaria treatment and referral for severe cases
Treatment of other infectious diseases and referral
of severe cases
Contraception and Breast and cervical cancer
screening:
Breast examination and referral of cases with
positive results
Cervical cancer screening with acetic acid ,
criotherapy and for all HIV + women older than 20
years and referral according to the national
guidelines
Earlier Pregnancy and Post-abortion Care :
• ANC including PMTCT and ARV treatment (according
to the guidelines and referral of suspect fetal pelvic
incompatibility )
• Post abortion care and treatment for complicated
abortion according to the guidelines .
General Care
Treatment on substances abuse
Treatment of cases of alcohol abuse
Mental health and Psychological
support
Immunization and Nutrition
Treatment of moderate and severe
malnutrition.
STI/HIV:
Treatment and care of Severe cases of
HIV-SIDA
Treatment and care of cases of Sever
cases of sexual violence and abuse
and referral to legal ad social services
Endemic Disease
Treatment and care for complicated
Pulmonary TB
Malaria Treatment
Treatment of severe infections
diseases
Contraception and Breast and
cervical cancer screening
Treatment of Breast masses and
others
Treatment of advanced cervical
lesions, colposcopy and LEEP;
Treatment of all medical and surgical
condition including
Obstetric Fistulas
Male circumcision
• Teenage pregnancy and Post
abortion care
• Post abortion care for complicated
abortion
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Area Community Package Minimal Pakage Comprehensive Package Specialized Package
WOMENATREPRODUCTIVEAGE
Information Education and
Comunication
IEC on personnel hygiene and sanitation
Imunization and Nutrition
Counseling on tetanus immunization
Nutritional Education
Anaemia assessment and referral
Iron and Folic acid supplementation,
Deworming (APE)
STI/HIV:
HIV counseling and testing
HIV/AIDS and ITS prevention counselling
and promotion of condom use
Condom Distribuition
Awareness on ITS signs and referral.
Endemic Disease :
TB screening and Community Dots
Malaria prevention diagnosis and first
treatment
Identification and referral of other
infection disease
Reproductive Health
IEC on contraception and Family planning
Counseling on Integrated FP care
Oral contraception only for if the first
visit was at the health facility
Identification of post-abortion care cases
and referral
Counseling on self-evaluation of breast
cancer and referral.
Screening of Domestic violence and
referral.
Referral of cases of infertility
Immunization and Nutrition
Tetanus Vaccination
Anaemia treatment
STI/HIV
STI screening (Syphilis, syndromic screening and treatment of patients and their
partners )
CT including PICT
HIV clinical WHO staging and referral
Referral of cases of Sexual violence for treatment
Endemic Disease
TB screening and referral
Treatment for non-complicated Malaria and others infection diseases referral for
severe cases
Contraception and Breast and cervical cancer screening and other
Reproductive Health conditions
Family planning (Injectable DEPO, oral contraception condom distribution and
emergency contraception).
Male involvement
Promotion of self-screening , clinical screening and referral of suspicious cases of
disease
Referral of HIV + women with 20+years old for cervical cancer screening
Referral for women older than 30 years for cervical cancer screening
Identification and referral of cases of infertility
Post Abortion Care
Post abortion care for non-complicated case of abortion and referral for
complicated cases
Immunization and Nutrition
Assessment of cases of moderate
anaemia.
STI/HIV:
Screening for STI and treatment
ARV according to the national
guidelines
Screening for Domestic violence
and sexual assault treatment and
referral if needed
Endemic Disease
TB screening and treatment
Malaria treatment and referral for
severe cases
Treatment of other infectious
diseases and referral of severe
cases
Contraception and Breast and
cervical cancer screening :
Counselling and provision of
temporary and Permanent
methods (Tubal Ligation, implants,
post-partum IUD and tubal
ligation)
Breast examination and referral of
cases with positive results
Within the FP services screening
with acetic acid, criotherapy for all
women older than 30 years and
referral according to the national
guidelines.
Treatment of infertility
Post abortion care :
• Post abortion care and treatment
for complicated abortion
according to the guidelines
Immunization and
Nutrition
Treatment of severe
case of anaemia
STI/HIV
Treatment and care of
severe cases of HIV
Treatment and care of
cases of severe cases of
sexual violence and
abuse and referral to
legal and social services
Contraception and
Breast and cervical
cancer screening
Counselling and provision
of Permanent methods
(Tubal Ligation, implants,
post-partum IUD)
Treatment of Breast
masses and others
Treatment of advanced
cervical lesions,
colposcopy, and LEEP;
Treatment of all medical
and surgical condition
including Obstetric
Fistulas
Male circuncision
Post abortion care
Post abortion care for
complicated abortion
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Information Education and
Communication
Hygiene Promotion
Warning signs during
pregnancy (bleeding, vaginal
liquids , respiratory distress,
fever, abnominal pain,
headache, seizures facial and
hand eadema)
Promotion of 4 Antenatal Visits
and follow on scheduled dates;
Appropriate follow-up on
preventive treatment provided
Counselling on institutional
birth and use of waiting house
Malaria Prevention and use of
TIP and LLTN
STI/HIV and other transmitted
infections
Syphilis test and treatment
HIV CT , partner and family
involvement for appropriate
PMTCT compliance and care
Support for sero-discordant
couples and Positive
prevention, prevention of
seroconversion during
pregnancy
Promotion of condom use
Prevention of Low Birth
TB prevention
Partum preparedness including
plan for referral in case of
emergency . (Family and
community organization and
preparation for emergency
transportation)
Psychosocial support through
Mother groups
Maternal deaths report (APE))
Information, Education, Communication and Counseling:
Counseling about danger signs (Bleeding, vaginal liquid discharge, Respiratory
distress, Fever, Headache seizures, Abdominal Pains, seizures, Facial and hand
Pregnancy Care
• Testo f proteinuria, blood surgar
and urine II
• Treatment of small and moderate
complications:
Moderate Anaemia
Infections of genital, urinal,
respiratory, gastric, etc. tract
post-abortion care
complications, referral
whenever necessary
Pré-Eclampsia
Treatment of any other moderate
condition present
Treatment of pre-referral and
reference of severe complications:
Severe Preeclampsia, Eclâmpsia,
Hemorrhage, Infections, post-
abortion complications that
required specialized attention,
Premature ruptured membranes
for more than 24 hours
(Antibiotherapy and Prevention of
Respiratory distress syndrom)
STI/HIV
Treatment of all STI including the
partner
Referral of failed cases to TARV
Prevention and management of
other diseases
Treatment of cases of moderate
malaria and referral whenever
necessary
Referral of cases of severe malaria
Test and Treatment of
Tuberculosis
Pregnancy Care:
• Complimentary exams
of Diagnostic like
Echography and others.
Management of all
immunization
• Management and
treatment of moderated
and severe
complications: Anaemia,
severe Preeclampsia,
Eclampsia, Third
trimester Bleeding
(Placental
abruption,placenta
previa), Premature
rupture of membranes
(Preventive Treatment
of respiratory Distress
sindrome), Threat of
premature birth, Ectopic
Pregnancy, post
abortion care
Management and
treatment of other
moderate and severe
medical conditions and
severe surgical
conditions
STI/HIV
Management and
treatment of stage III and
IV of HIV
Prevention and
Managment of other
diseases
Management of extra-
pulmonary TB
Management of cases of
resistant TB
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MATERNALHEALTH
CHILDBIRTHLABORANDDELIVERY,IMEDIATEPOST-PARTUM
Third Stage of Labor
Recognition of labor and
referral to the US;
Labor:
Organize/Provide rapid
transport to the Health facility
for woman in labor and for the
mother and the new-born;
In the case of impossible
referral, or delays in arrival in
the labor court:
No execution of
interventions or
proceedings that could
endanger the lives of the
mother and/or the fetus;
Perform Hygenic labor;
Immediate Post-Natal:
Recognition of signs and
symptoms of danger during
childbirth and postnatal and
send/refer to the Health
facility;
Pay immediate attention to the
newborn (Newborn IMCI
package for basic care )
Umbilical Cords care (don’t
apply any substances to the
umbilical cord);
Prevention of hypothermia
through the method on
Kangaroo mother (skin-to-
skin contact with the
mother)
Discourage bathing within
the first 6 hours
Prevention of hypoglycemia
through the promotion and
support of exclusive and
immediate breast feeding
Recognition of signs of
danger including signs of
Neonatal Tetanus and
forwarding to the Health
facility
Promotion of hygienic care,
personal and of the new-born
Attention during third stage of labor and childbirth (COEmB):
Humanization of Labor (first stage)
Diagnostic of labour
Assure measures of bio-safety
Counselling and testing for HIV
Counselling: feeding, deambultion, frequentemptying bladder, adopt most
confortable position
PMTCT Arv Prophylaxis
Systematic use of partograph (opening at 4 cm and continuing) and attempted
decision making in relation to labor procedure
Screening and treatment/measures of support timely referral for: Premature
rupture of membranes, premature labor, abnormal fetal lie, suspicion of fetal-
pelvic incompatibility, preeclampsia/eclampsia, Prolonged labor or
obstructed, signs of uterine pre-rupture, antenatal bleeding, and others.
Humanization of Labor
Permit more comfortable and convenient positions for the woman, depending
on her choice
Permit the presence of a companion depending on the woman’s choice
Timeous decision making in relation to the danger symptoms, signs and
positions for the woman and fetus, as well as timeous referral of labor
complications bleeding during birth, prolonged second stage of labor, bleeding
and other situations)
Active management of the third stage of labour (Oxitocin after delivery of
placenta with controled traction and uterine massage)
Protected ligation of umbilical cord (PMTCT)
Postnatal care
• Pay immediate attention to the newborn
Prevention of hypothermia - immediate skin-to-skin contact with the mother
Prevention of Hypoglycemia – breast feeding in the 1st hour after birth
Detection of signs of danger to the newborn, measures of support and referrals
• Monitoring and evaluation of the mother’s condition (retained placenta
lacerations and hemorrhages)
Manual removal of placenta, if necessary
Suturof first grade laceration, management of supportive care and referral of
2nd e 3rd grade laceration
• Management, treatment/measures of support pre-referral and immediate referral
of cases of postnatal moderate and severe bleeding
General Aspects:
Promote the involvement of the father and the family, depending on the woman’s
choice, during the period of third phase of labor and childbirth.
Attention during Labor
Humanization of Labor (second
and third stage)
Management and treatment of
mild to moderate
complications during the
period of dilatation third stage
of labor – according to the
national norms:
Preeclampsia mild and severe
Assisted delivery with vacuum
extractor
Premature ruptured
membranes with the progress
of labor
Manage, treatment/measures of
support pre-referral and timely
referral of:
Threats of Preterm birth
Preeclampsia mild and severe;
and Eclampsia Premature
rupture of membranes
(without the progress of labor);
Osbstructed labour;
Manageable prolonged labor ;
Prenatal bleeding and bleeding
during birth;
Other medical or surgical
situations/complications that
require different attention.
Postnatal attention:
Counseling, informed choice and
insertion of DIU/implant
Treatment of mild to moderate
complications during immediate
postnatal stage (according to the
norms of this level of attention):
Suture of second grade of
vaginal
Mild and moderate
postpatuum bleeding
Pueperal infection
Attention to newborn
Read Attention to Newborn
Attention during
second and third stage
of labor (COEmC):
Induction of Labor;
Manage, treatment and
follow up of moderate
and severe complications
according to the norms
(including blood
transfusion, Caesarian
Section and
hysterectomy):
Early childbirth
Severe Preeclampsia
Eclâmpsia
Premature Ruptured
membranes
Obstructured Labor
Fetal bad
presentations or
abnormal lie position
Antenatal Bleeding
Bleeding during
childbirth
Other
situations/complicati
ons medical and/or
surgical that occur
during the third stage
of labor and
childbirth;
Attention to Immediate
Postnatal:
Treatment of moderate
to severe complications
during immediate
postnatal, according to
the norms (including
blood transfusion and
hysterectomy):
Moderate to severe
Bleeding
Infection/sépsis
puérperal
Suture of Third grade
vaginal lacerations
Other
situations/complicati
ons medical and
surgical that may
occur during
immediate postnatal;
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MATERNALHEALTH
POSTNATALATTENTIONANDFAMILYPLANNING
Postnatal:
Support and Incentive for the
presence at the consultation
Postnatal during the 1st week
(3rd and 7th day) after childbirth,
or the earliest date after
childbirth
Recognition of danger signs at
the postnatal and immediate
referral to the US
Promotion of hygienic care of the
breasts
Family Planning:
Counseling on planning of
Pregnancies/FP, and for the
utilization of a method of
efficient FP (even during breast
feeding)
Community leaders and
community comites,males and
women groups involvment to
create demand increase
adherence to modern methods,
and aliminate resistance to
modern methods
Nutrition and Vaccination:
Vitamin A for the mother and the
child after Child birth
Counseling, support and
incentive for exclusive breast
feeding
Counseling on educated nutrition
–balanced diet for the mother
ITS/HIV and other diseases
Recognition of signs and
symptoms of STI and referral of
the couple
Support for appropriate
preventive and curative
treatment
Counselling for appropriate use
of condom for HIV/SIDA, and STI
prevention
Participation in the support
groups for HIV+ mothers
General Care:
Counseling on the use of RMTI
for pregnant women and children
less than 5 years old
Encourage the communities in
the heath activities
participation(parades and
woman and child weeks)
CURING THE 1ST WEEK:
1st Consultation PP/PF
Information, Education e comunication
Counselling on breastfeeeding earlier frequent nursing , latch on
assistance prevention and relief of common difficulties, appropriate
diet safe sex, and family planning, and warning folow up visits for both
mother and baby.
Male envolviment
Gynecological Exam, screening, management, treatment or
measures pre-referral and referral of
Lacerations s, placenta retenction, infected episiectomy and other
situations
Detect and manage/ measure/treatment pre-referral and timeous
referral to women with signs and symptoms of infection/ puerperal
sepsis
General Care
Evaluation of the general state of the woman: complications on the
breasts and with breast feeding, signs of anemia and other situations –
treatment and referral if necessary
• Identify and refer suspect post-natal depression cases
Provision of contraceptive chosen by the woman (according to
the norms)
Nutrition and Vaccination
Supplementation with Iron, Folic Acid and Vitamin A
Nutritional counseling
STI/HIV
CT of HIV ( Refer to services for chronic diseases)
Counseling for ARV prophylasis for the mother and recent newborn (up
to 4 weeks)
Follow-up after ARV prophylaxis
WHO staging and appropriate follow-up for pre ARV patients and if
alegible referral for ART
Counseling
Family Planning Consultations
• Provision of contraceptive method chosen by the woman according to
norms
• Referral of women who choose tubal ligation
• Safe Sex and use of Condom
Evaluation of the general state of the woman
Detection, management of anemia and referral if necessary
Gynecological Examination
• Detection and treatment of infections and referral if necessary
DURING 1ST WEEK:
1st Consultation PP/FP:
Gynecological Examination,
screening, management,
treatment or measures pre-
referral and referral of:
Women with moderate/severe signs
of de infection/ puerperal sepsis
General Care/Consultations
Evaluation of the general state of the
woman: treatment of complications
like anemia, infections puerperal
sepsis (referral when necessary:
severe cases)
Identify women with postnatal
depression, perform initial
management and referral
Nutrition and Vaccination
Treat maternal Malnutrition
Family Planning
• Provision of contraceptive method
chosen by the woman according to
norms
Provision of IUDs and referral of
women for tubal ligation up
DURING THE 1ST WEEK:
1st Consultation PP/PF:
Treatment of all complications
like severe anemia, bleeding,
infection/ puerperal sepsis,
severe postnatal depression
Counseling and provision of
permanent contraception (Tubal
ligation and vasectomy)
Post partum and family
planning consultations
Evaluation of the general state
of the woman and treatment of
all moderate to severe
puerperal complications.
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Area Community Package Minimum Package Comprehensive Package Specialized Package
NEWBORN’SHEALTH
IMMEDIATEATTENTION≤24HOURS Counseling
• The Importance of the postnatal
visit for the mother and
newborn in the first week (3rd
and 7th day), specially the
earliest possible after birth
• HIV testing
• Consultation and treatment
follow up (HIV+ mother and
exposed infant)
• Following immunization
calendar (Pólio 0 and BCG)
• Support and counseling for
exclusive breastfeeding
• Eraly birth registration
• Promotion of use of local
products to reinforce mother’s
diet
• Hygenic care for the newborn
Implementation of Neonatal
IMCI community package
• Identification of danger signs of
newborn and timely
• Advise on the use of treated
mosquito bednets
• Support consented defaulter
tracking of children followed in
at risk child consultation
•Identification of newborns from
Neonatal IMCI
Basic neonatal care (umbilical cord care, prevention of hypothermia
through immedate skin-to-skin contact with the mother, and of
hypoglicemia through exclusive breastfeeding in the 1st hour after
birth, vitamin K, ocular prophylaxis)
Assess signs of immediate risk and basic neonatal resuscitation.
General Care:
• Promote mother-infant staying in the same room at the health facility
• Advice on good breastfeeding practices, ‘pega’ and position
• Identification and referral of moderate / severe situations (preterm
birth of <1500 g or 32 weeks of gestation, asphyxia, sepsis and
convulsions)
• Identification and reference of congenital malformations
• Advice on home care, hygiene care in the management of newborns
(including hand washing), and administration of oral treatment at home
(eg ARV syrup, IHN) if necessary
STI/HIV
Identification and referral of children born to non treated RPR+
mother; newborns of HIV+ mother; administration of ARV for PMTCT
according to the guidelines
Referral of newborns of HIV+ mothers for follow up at Post Partum
Consultation and at risk child consul from 4 weeks after birth
Counseling mother to get a PCR test for newborn at 4 weeks
Management of other diseases and situations:
Identification and prophylaxis of newborns from TB+ mothers
Identification and referral of nweborns with jaundice, partum related
trauma, congenital malformations and other risk situations
Neonatal IMCI and CERN
Basic neonatal resuscitation
Treatment and pre-referral
measures of moderate to severe
clinical conditions (including
asphyxia, preterm birth <1500 g or
32 gstation weeks, Convulsions,
Sepsis) and referral
Mother Canguru care in children
>1500 g and referral if the newborn
has complications
Treatment, pre-referral measures of
sick newborn in need of specialuised
care
Management of cases of moderate
jaundice and pre-referral treatment
of cases of jaundice
Management of minor/moderate
partum trauma and referral of
severe partum trauma cases
General care
Identification of congenital
malformation and referral
STI/HIV
Management of congenital syphilis
CERN and
Management/treatment of
all moderate to severe
situations in the newborn
Complete neonatal
resuscitation
Management of prematurity
and its complications
Management of severe
partum related trauma
Management of pathologic
jaundice and other severe
complications
Management of congenital
malformations
Management of severe
asphyxia
Management of severe sepsis
Intensive neonatal care
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49
AttentiontoNewborn(24hoursto28days)
mothers with TB or HIV and
referral to the health facility
Neonatal IMCI:
Assesment and follow up of the newborn (3rd, 7th and between 21st -
28th days) according to the guidelines and norms of post partum
consultation and referral of all complications
Orientation on newborn care at home, identification of danger signs
and management
Identification and treatment of localised infections according to
neonatal IMCI
Identification of danger signs (malformations, jaundice, hypertonicity,
umbilical cord, tense fontannelle, irritability...) and timely referral
Vacinations and General Care
Vacination with BCG and Pólio
Counsel, promote and support exclusive breastfeding during the first 6
months of life (good practices, ‘pega’ and position), identify feeding
problems, [provide counceling and support
Prevention of newborn hypothermia; Mother Canguru method
Advocacy for utilization of waiting houses in post-natal period for
newborns with low weight
Promotion of adequate use of mosquito nets
Identification, prophylaxis, management and referral of risk
situations/conditionsfor the newborn (ex: social problems,twins,
formula feedingl, separated parents, orphans, exposition to TB and
HIV, syphylis, etc)
Early birth registration
Management of Other Diseases or Situations:
• Recognition of signs of neonatal tetanus, pre-refrence measures and
timely referral to specialised level
Management of newborn
complicated situations and referral
of severe cases
Management of situations where the
newborn is at risk
Management of all newborn
complications up to 28 days
Treatment of neonatal tetanus
cases
Management of growth failure
and eventual feeding problems
and counselling
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CHILDUNDER5YEARSOLD
Community IMCI:
Nutrition
• Counselling and support to exclusive
breastfeeding during the first 6 months of life,
good breast feeding practices, adequate
complimentary feeding, continue breast
feeding up to 24 months and balanced diet
after weaning
• Supplementation with Vitamin A (including
cases of measles)
• Deworming routine
• Nutritional triage (MUAC): management,
treatment and follow up of mild malnutrition
without complications and referral of
moderate, acute and severe malnutrition
Prevention and identification of Diseases:
• Counselling on: the adequate use of mosquito
nets; the importance of the health card, the
necessity of growth control and to complete
the vaccine calendar; child care at home; and
personal hygienic care, at home and in the
community
• Oral rehydration therapy
• Treatment of diarhoeia with Zinc
• Recognition of danger signs and referral to
health facility
• Identification, of signs and symptoms of
Malaria and initiate the treatment (1st line)
• Treatment of pneumonia (1st
line)
• Screening of TB contacts
Support consented tracking and follow up of
cases in prophylaxis (CTX, INH, ARV)
Encourage communities to participate in
activities (parades and woman and child
week)
Information for prevention of accidents and
intoxications.
Information and screening in oral, eye and
skin problems
Identification and referral of children victims
of domestic violence and sexual abuse
Community counseling and testing in health
Environment hygiene and sanitation
IMCI
Identification and treatment of diseases according to IMCI
Identification of danger signs (according to IMCI) and referral
Provider initiated counselling and testing – Evaluate signs of HIV infection and
offer testing
Administration of better hydration salts and Zinc
General Care
Perform complete physical exam including anthropometry, psychomotor
development and referral in the presence of alert signs and development
alterations
Identification of risky situations and referral to CCR (orphans, malnutrition,
twins, exposure to HIV, exposure to TB…)
Rapid malaria test, Hbg with hemogloboral inmeter and BK collection
Basic packages of mobile brigades including interventions for child care
Prevention of accidents and intoxications
Distribution of mosquito nets and promotion of adequate use of nets and
environment sanitation
Nutrition and Vaccination
Advice and promote exclusive breastfeeding up to 6 months of age
Guide for adequate child alimentation and personal and oral hygiene
Promote vaccinations
Tetanus vaccination in the first and second classes (schools)
Deworming and vitamin A according to the calendar.
CCR
Provider initiated counselling and testing for HIV (offer routine testing to all
children and mothers with unknown serostatus)
Promotion of exclusive breastfeeding up to 6 months of age, counselling and
nutritional follow up according to the national norms
Anthropometric assessment , psycomotoe development, identification of alert
signs and referral
Screening of TB and referrral of TB suspect cases of contacts
Diagnostic of HIV in children born to HIV+ mothers according to the national
protocol (Rapid HIV test and DBS for PCR where available)
CTX prophylaxis for children of HIV+ mothers
INH prophylaxis for children exposed to TB
Identification and management of cases of mild, moderate and severe
malnourishment without complications, refer if the there is no improvement
Measures of pre-referral and referral for hospitalization of cases of acute and
severe malnourishment with complications.
Identification and referral for cases of children in risky situations (ex: sexual
abuse, domestic violence) for psycho-social support
Other transmittable diseases
Identifications of rubella suspected cases
Identification and referral of TB suspected cases
IMCI
Management of cases of psyco-social
disturbances
Treatment of diseases according to IMCI ,
identification of danger signs (according to
IMCI) and treatment, referral of
complicated cases
Management and referral of cases of
alterations of development
Management of cases of meningitis
according to the norms, including
prophylaxis.
General Care
Oxigen therapy
Clinical exams: Hemogram , Urin II, HTZ,
Parasitology of feces, X-ray , LCR (Lab.
With optic mycroscope), CD4
Nutrition and Vaccination
Treatment of child with severe
malnourishment and complications;
referral if it does not improve
HIV
Follow up and ARV treatment for children
infected with HIV
Referral in the case of therapeutic failure
CTX prophylaxis for children infected with
HIV
Referral in case of Kaposi sarcoma
diagnosis
CCR
HIV diagnostic for children following the
national guidelines (rapid test, BDS for PCR
for children < 9 months exposed to HIV)
Identification of children infected with HIV
and referral for clinical follow up according
to the national guidelines.
Other transmittable diseases
• Management of cases of pulmonary
tuberculosis and referral in cases of extra
pulmonary tuberculosis
Treatment of all complications and severe
situations
Complications of severe malaria,
meningitis, malnutrition and measles.
General Care
Neurologic and development
consultation
Psychologic Consultation
Treatment of all surgical situations
Management of sexual abuse and
domestic violece situations and referral
to services of psyco-social support
Complimentary specialized analysis
(laboratory,X-ray, TAC, RMM,Ecografia)
HIV
Follow up of HIV infected children
infected in second line therapeutic
regimen
Follow up of HIV infected children by
horizontal transmission
Follow up of children in treatment for
Kaposi sarcoma
Other transmittable diseases
• Treatment of cases of complicated,
resistant and extra- pulmonary
tuberculosis