The Health Finance and Governance Briefing KitHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Megan Meline, Lisa Tarantino, Jeremy Kanthor, and Sharon Nakhimovsky
Published: September 2015
Resource Description: Getting access to affordable, quality health care is a universal story that touches virtually every family in the world. At the same time, providing quality health services and access to trained health professionals is a challenge for governments. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 150 million people worldwide face “catastrophic expenditure” because of high costs of health care. In other words, they may have to forgo paying for basic needs, such as food, housing, or education to pay for medical treatment instead. These costs include transportation, doctors’ fees, medicine, hospitalization bills, and days lost from work.
Behind these sobering statistics lies a wealth of news and feature stories waiting for the media to investigate and share with national leaders and policymakers as well as civil society groups who can advocate for changes to health budgets and policies. At the heart of these stories are important questions about the financing of health care and the quality of governance that ensures responsive and effective management of those resources and services.
But writing health finance and governance stories can be challenging. Health finance is riddled with complex language, technical economic terms, and numbers – not necessarily a journalist’s comfort zone. The right sources for these stories can be difficult to identify and unwilling to talk. Data may be difficult to locate or to understand. And while corruption makes for splashy headlines, the broader systemic challenges of health governance are not widely understood — and yet they are important.
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing Kit is designed to help journalists and their editors uncover and tell these important health stories that affect people all around the world.
HFG began working in Namibia in 2013, closely partnering with the Namibian Ministry of Health and Social Services and going on to collaborate with key government agencies, such as the Namibian Social Security Commission and the Universal Health
Coverage Advisory Committee of Namibia. The overarching aim of our technical assistance has been to support Namibia’s progress toward UHC to ensure all can access necessary, quality health care without financial struggle. We emphasized a government-led and -owned approach as we supported the Namibian government in addressing some of the key challenges it faced at the start of the project.
HFG’s support has helped strengthen the government’s capacity to mobilize and manage resources; improve efficiency, quality, and equity of health services; expand access to health care; sustain key health interventions, especially the HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and treatment program; and, ultimately, identify sustainable financing for UHC. We provided technical support to the Namibian government’s Health Accounts team, equipping them with tools and know-how to lead and implement four Health Accounts exercises and analyze and present data for better policy analysis and evidence-based decision making. Our support has helped institutionalize Health Accounts in Namibia and provided the country’s policymakers with evidence to examine health financing options for UHC, advocate for greater resources, and explore financial risk protection options.
Strengthening the larger health system and generating fiscal space through improved efficiency of health services was another important goal for HFG.
Findings of the health facility costing and district hospital efficiency study we undertook will enable the government to identify where it can save resources, how it can improve equity in service distribution, and what Namibia’s total financing requirement is for UHC.
This report highlights some of the major contributions HFG and its key partners have made toward more efficient use of limited health resources, improved sustainability of
health programs, and progress toward UHC in Namibia.
Expanding Coverage to Informal Workers: A Study of EPCMD Countries’ Efforts t...HFG Project
For many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), expanding health coverage to informal workers is one of the most common, yet complex challenges requiring action. Informal workers are, by definition, not provided with legal or social protections through their employment, and are vulnerable to health and economic shocks. They also account for a large percentage of the population in LMICs. Expanding or deepening health coverage to informal workers is thus an area of interest for stakeholders pursuing universal health coverage (UHC): the goal that the entire population can access needed good-quality care without risk of impoverishment. Pro-poor coverage schemes that rely on prepayment – payment delinked from the time of care seeking – are a key financing strategy for UHC (WHO 2010). However, including informal workers in such schemes is challenging given that informal workers are not typically registered in taxation systems and social protection systems, nor covered by labor laws and regulations, making them less visible to the government and other stakeholders (Rockefeller Foundation 2013).
This report complements existing literature on how health reforms can improve the welfare of informal workers, focusing on the 25 countries prioritized for development assistance by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) as part of its Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Deaths (EPCMD) initiative. Given the strong interest in these questions among EPCMD countries, USAID commissioned the Health Finance and Governance project (HFG) to conduct this research and provide recommendations relevant to UHC policy discussions in these countries.
Linkages Between the Essential Health Services Package and Government-Sponsor...HFG Project
Priority setting is a key function of health systems that seek to achieve universal health coverage. The Essential Health Services Package (EHSP) explicitly prioritizes certain services; government-sponsored health benefit plans implicitly prioritize others. To gain insights into the purpose, policy objectives, and governance of the EPHS and dominant health benefit plans in Ethiopia, we conducted a case study in 2016. Methods included a desk review of relevant documents and qualitative analysis of 15 key informant interviews of leading health finance experts in Addis Ababa. All data were coded and analyzed using a thematic inductive framework.
Modeling the impact of the health finance and governance projectHFG Project
Over its six-year life (2012-2018), the project worked with more than 40 partner countries to increase their domestic resources for health, manage resources more effectively, and reduce system bottlenecks in order to increase access to and use of priority health services and strengthen health systems overall. HFG provided state-of-the-art and country-specific technical assistance to remove obstacles that impede effective health system functioning and essential reforms. Recognizing the importance of measuring its impact, HFG quantified its return on investment for HFG health systems strengthening efforts.
HFG and its partner Avenir Health conducted a rigorous exercise to estimate the impact of the project’s health systems strengthening activities on its overall goal: increased use of priority health services. We used Spectrum, a suite of modeling tools developed by Avenir Health and partners, to quantify impact on mortality and morbidity based on changes in the coverage of specific priority health services due to the project’s activities aimed at improving access, quality, and use of health care. Given the diverse activities of HFG and the challenge of establishing a measurable causal link between project activities and coverage effects, we adopted a conservative approach and chose for this impact modeling exercise a subset of HFG activities for which a direct link was apparent. Based on these parameters, the exercise was conducted for eight country programs: Bangladesh, Cote d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Haiti, Nigeria, Senegal, and Vietnam.
Using a methodical approach, we analyzed individual project activities in these countries and the expected effects on service coverage to estimate the impact on morbidity and mortality. We examined how our activities, including implementing strategies for improved human resources for health, operationalizing health insurance schemes, rolling out packages of health services, and using costed plans and packages to advocate for more financial resources, will increase access to health services, which in turn will lead to greater coverage of health services among targeted populations and ultimately to reduced morbidity and mortality. We modeled the impact of HFG’s activities by quantifying the number of deaths that were averted as a result of HFG-supported strategies and reforms.
The modeling results indicate that continued implementation of health systems strengthening strategies like those HFG supported would bring significant expansion of health care coverage and enhanced health outcomes.
This report presents country- and activity-specific results and the methodology for estimating coverage changes and impact. We hope this modeling exercise adds to the global understanding of how the impact of health systems strengthening can be measured. It provides powerful evidence on why investment and effort in strengthening health systems must continue.
Health Trends in the Middle East and North AfricaHFG Project
In the past several decades, countries in the Middle East and North Africa have made significant improvements in developing their health systems and improving the health status of their populations. However, the region continues to face substantial and diverse political, economic, social, and health challenges: a rise in the burden of noncommunicable diseases, ongoing conflicts in several countries, and refugee crises. To inform future USAID health investments in the Middle East and North Africa, the Sustaining Health Outcomes through the Private Sector (SHOPS) Plus project and the Health Financing and Governance (HFG) project conducted an analysis of the private health sector and the health financing landscape from January 2017 to April 2018. The countries included in this analysis are Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, the West Bank and Gaza, and Yemen.
Capital Investment in Health Systems: What is the latest thinking?HFG Project
Capital investment in health typically refers to large expenditures in construction of hospitals and other facilities, investment in diagnostic and treatment technologies, and information technology platforms. These investments are characterized by their longevity and they are critical to efforts to improve healthcare quality and efficiency. Contrary to developed countries where there is well documented experience on capital investment in the health sector, including use of public private partnerships for the investment; there is little evidence on capital investment in health from low and middle income countries.
This work was undertaken to add to the HFG’s knowledge and learning strategy by clarifying what good practice guidance exists in capital benchmark in LMICs health sectors, as well as the HFG project’s experience in the area. This brief will be of value to all those interested in the planning and financing the capital investment in the health sector. This includes politicians, planners, managers, health professionals, architects, designers, and researchers in both the public and private sectors.
Getting Health’s Slice of the Pie: Domestic Resource Mobilization for HealthHFG Project
Many low- and middle-income countries have experienced strong economic growth in recent years, resulting in increased capacity for social sector spending. Net energy importers have further benefited from falling fossil fuel prices. At the same time donors are preparing to scale back development assistance, including support for global health initiatives. Responding to a lack of practical guidance on how countries can mobilize more domestic resources for the health sector, the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) project organized a series of joint learning workshops to promote knowledge exchange, share new and existing resources, and support countries in a DRM-for-health action planning process.
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing KitHFG Project
Resource Type: Brief
Authors: Megan Meline, Lisa Tarantino, Jeremy Kanthor, and Sharon Nakhimovsky
Published: September 2015
Resource Description: Getting access to affordable, quality health care is a universal story that touches virtually every family in the world. At the same time, providing quality health services and access to trained health professionals is a challenge for governments. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 150 million people worldwide face “catastrophic expenditure” because of high costs of health care. In other words, they may have to forgo paying for basic needs, such as food, housing, or education to pay for medical treatment instead. These costs include transportation, doctors’ fees, medicine, hospitalization bills, and days lost from work.
Behind these sobering statistics lies a wealth of news and feature stories waiting for the media to investigate and share with national leaders and policymakers as well as civil society groups who can advocate for changes to health budgets and policies. At the heart of these stories are important questions about the financing of health care and the quality of governance that ensures responsive and effective management of those resources and services.
But writing health finance and governance stories can be challenging. Health finance is riddled with complex language, technical economic terms, and numbers – not necessarily a journalist’s comfort zone. The right sources for these stories can be difficult to identify and unwilling to talk. Data may be difficult to locate or to understand. And while corruption makes for splashy headlines, the broader systemic challenges of health governance are not widely understood — and yet they are important.
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing Kit is designed to help journalists and their editors uncover and tell these important health stories that affect people all around the world.
HFG began working in Namibia in 2013, closely partnering with the Namibian Ministry of Health and Social Services and going on to collaborate with key government agencies, such as the Namibian Social Security Commission and the Universal Health
Coverage Advisory Committee of Namibia. The overarching aim of our technical assistance has been to support Namibia’s progress toward UHC to ensure all can access necessary, quality health care without financial struggle. We emphasized a government-led and -owned approach as we supported the Namibian government in addressing some of the key challenges it faced at the start of the project.
HFG’s support has helped strengthen the government’s capacity to mobilize and manage resources; improve efficiency, quality, and equity of health services; expand access to health care; sustain key health interventions, especially the HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and treatment program; and, ultimately, identify sustainable financing for UHC. We provided technical support to the Namibian government’s Health Accounts team, equipping them with tools and know-how to lead and implement four Health Accounts exercises and analyze and present data for better policy analysis and evidence-based decision making. Our support has helped institutionalize Health Accounts in Namibia and provided the country’s policymakers with evidence to examine health financing options for UHC, advocate for greater resources, and explore financial risk protection options.
Strengthening the larger health system and generating fiscal space through improved efficiency of health services was another important goal for HFG.
Findings of the health facility costing and district hospital efficiency study we undertook will enable the government to identify where it can save resources, how it can improve equity in service distribution, and what Namibia’s total financing requirement is for UHC.
This report highlights some of the major contributions HFG and its key partners have made toward more efficient use of limited health resources, improved sustainability of
health programs, and progress toward UHC in Namibia.
Expanding Coverage to Informal Workers: A Study of EPCMD Countries’ Efforts t...HFG Project
For many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), expanding health coverage to informal workers is one of the most common, yet complex challenges requiring action. Informal workers are, by definition, not provided with legal or social protections through their employment, and are vulnerable to health and economic shocks. They also account for a large percentage of the population in LMICs. Expanding or deepening health coverage to informal workers is thus an area of interest for stakeholders pursuing universal health coverage (UHC): the goal that the entire population can access needed good-quality care without risk of impoverishment. Pro-poor coverage schemes that rely on prepayment – payment delinked from the time of care seeking – are a key financing strategy for UHC (WHO 2010). However, including informal workers in such schemes is challenging given that informal workers are not typically registered in taxation systems and social protection systems, nor covered by labor laws and regulations, making them less visible to the government and other stakeholders (Rockefeller Foundation 2013).
This report complements existing literature on how health reforms can improve the welfare of informal workers, focusing on the 25 countries prioritized for development assistance by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) as part of its Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Deaths (EPCMD) initiative. Given the strong interest in these questions among EPCMD countries, USAID commissioned the Health Finance and Governance project (HFG) to conduct this research and provide recommendations relevant to UHC policy discussions in these countries.
Linkages Between the Essential Health Services Package and Government-Sponsor...HFG Project
Priority setting is a key function of health systems that seek to achieve universal health coverage. The Essential Health Services Package (EHSP) explicitly prioritizes certain services; government-sponsored health benefit plans implicitly prioritize others. To gain insights into the purpose, policy objectives, and governance of the EPHS and dominant health benefit plans in Ethiopia, we conducted a case study in 2016. Methods included a desk review of relevant documents and qualitative analysis of 15 key informant interviews of leading health finance experts in Addis Ababa. All data were coded and analyzed using a thematic inductive framework.
Modeling the impact of the health finance and governance projectHFG Project
Over its six-year life (2012-2018), the project worked with more than 40 partner countries to increase their domestic resources for health, manage resources more effectively, and reduce system bottlenecks in order to increase access to and use of priority health services and strengthen health systems overall. HFG provided state-of-the-art and country-specific technical assistance to remove obstacles that impede effective health system functioning and essential reforms. Recognizing the importance of measuring its impact, HFG quantified its return on investment for HFG health systems strengthening efforts.
HFG and its partner Avenir Health conducted a rigorous exercise to estimate the impact of the project’s health systems strengthening activities on its overall goal: increased use of priority health services. We used Spectrum, a suite of modeling tools developed by Avenir Health and partners, to quantify impact on mortality and morbidity based on changes in the coverage of specific priority health services due to the project’s activities aimed at improving access, quality, and use of health care. Given the diverse activities of HFG and the challenge of establishing a measurable causal link between project activities and coverage effects, we adopted a conservative approach and chose for this impact modeling exercise a subset of HFG activities for which a direct link was apparent. Based on these parameters, the exercise was conducted for eight country programs: Bangladesh, Cote d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Haiti, Nigeria, Senegal, and Vietnam.
Using a methodical approach, we analyzed individual project activities in these countries and the expected effects on service coverage to estimate the impact on morbidity and mortality. We examined how our activities, including implementing strategies for improved human resources for health, operationalizing health insurance schemes, rolling out packages of health services, and using costed plans and packages to advocate for more financial resources, will increase access to health services, which in turn will lead to greater coverage of health services among targeted populations and ultimately to reduced morbidity and mortality. We modeled the impact of HFG’s activities by quantifying the number of deaths that were averted as a result of HFG-supported strategies and reforms.
The modeling results indicate that continued implementation of health systems strengthening strategies like those HFG supported would bring significant expansion of health care coverage and enhanced health outcomes.
This report presents country- and activity-specific results and the methodology for estimating coverage changes and impact. We hope this modeling exercise adds to the global understanding of how the impact of health systems strengthening can be measured. It provides powerful evidence on why investment and effort in strengthening health systems must continue.
Health Trends in the Middle East and North AfricaHFG Project
In the past several decades, countries in the Middle East and North Africa have made significant improvements in developing their health systems and improving the health status of their populations. However, the region continues to face substantial and diverse political, economic, social, and health challenges: a rise in the burden of noncommunicable diseases, ongoing conflicts in several countries, and refugee crises. To inform future USAID health investments in the Middle East and North Africa, the Sustaining Health Outcomes through the Private Sector (SHOPS) Plus project and the Health Financing and Governance (HFG) project conducted an analysis of the private health sector and the health financing landscape from January 2017 to April 2018. The countries included in this analysis are Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, the West Bank and Gaza, and Yemen.
Capital Investment in Health Systems: What is the latest thinking?HFG Project
Capital investment in health typically refers to large expenditures in construction of hospitals and other facilities, investment in diagnostic and treatment technologies, and information technology platforms. These investments are characterized by their longevity and they are critical to efforts to improve healthcare quality and efficiency. Contrary to developed countries where there is well documented experience on capital investment in the health sector, including use of public private partnerships for the investment; there is little evidence on capital investment in health from low and middle income countries.
This work was undertaken to add to the HFG’s knowledge and learning strategy by clarifying what good practice guidance exists in capital benchmark in LMICs health sectors, as well as the HFG project’s experience in the area. This brief will be of value to all those interested in the planning and financing the capital investment in the health sector. This includes politicians, planners, managers, health professionals, architects, designers, and researchers in both the public and private sectors.
Getting Health’s Slice of the Pie: Domestic Resource Mobilization for HealthHFG Project
Many low- and middle-income countries have experienced strong economic growth in recent years, resulting in increased capacity for social sector spending. Net energy importers have further benefited from falling fossil fuel prices. At the same time donors are preparing to scale back development assistance, including support for global health initiatives. Responding to a lack of practical guidance on how countries can mobilize more domestic resources for the health sector, the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) project organized a series of joint learning workshops to promote knowledge exchange, share new and existing resources, and support countries in a DRM-for-health action planning process.
Maximizing Human Capital by Aligning Investments in Health and EducationHFG Project
There is a strong evidence base that identifies strategic investments in health and education across the life course that can maximize human capital development. Key opportunities exist during prenatal development and the first 1000 days, early childhood, school-age years, and adolescence to deliver cost-effective interventions that improve both health and education outcomes. Current global investments are imbalanced and miss opportunities for synergies between sectors. Coordinating health and education efforts, especially during school-age years, could enhance returns on investments and help populations reach their full potential.
Improving Efficiency to Achieve Health System Goals in Botswana: Background P...HFG Project
Health outcomes have improved in Botswana over the last few decades. These successes have come at the same time as overall macroeconomic growth, with annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth averaging around 6 percent between 2010 and 2015 (IMF 2015), and Human Development Index ranking above the regional average. These improvements originate in a strong health service delivery system. In 2008, Botswana’s public health system included 338 health posts and 277 health clinics, sufficient to ensure that at least 80 percent of the population has coverage of essential, high-impact services. Management of these services was initially done by the Ministry of Local Government but has been transferred to district health teams under the Ministry of Health (MOH). As of 2008, Botswana’s public health system also had 17 primary hospitals, 14 district hospitals, two referral hospitals, and one mental health hospital; these hospitals are managed by the central government.
South Africa HIV and TB Expenditure Review 2014/15 - 2016/17. Executive SummaryHFG Project
The South African Government (SAG) and its development partners have mounted a formidable response to the world’s largest HIV epidemic and a persistent burden of tuberculosis (TB), the country’s leading killer. Nearly 4 million South Africans initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) by the end of financial year 2016/17, helping to curtail new infections and reduce the number of annual HIV-related deaths. Mortality from TB has also declined thanks, in part, to improved treatment success.
Despite progress, challenges remain. Roughly 3 million people living with HIV (PLHIV) lack treatment, and each year more than a quarter million are newly infected. Moreover, nearly a half million South Africans contract TB every year, with an increasing share affected by drug-resistant strains.
To effectively plan and steward the health system, the SAG routinely monitors programmatic and financial performance of the response to HIV and TB, including by tracking expenditure. Analysis of spending, including trends in sources, levels, geographic and programmatic distribution and cost drivers can help policymakers to assess whether resources are reaching priority populations, interventions, and hotspot geographies; to identify potential opportunities to improve allocative and technical efficiency; and to stimulate more productive dialogue at multiple levels of the system.
This review of HIV and TB expenditure in South Africa is an input to policy, planning and management processes within and amongst spheres of government and between government and development partners. The data have been especially useful to national and provincial programme managers as they perform their oversight functions, leading to improved spending of available resources. With 52 annexes, it also serves as an authoritative reference document detailing levels and trends in HIV and TB spending by the three main funders of the disease responses: the SAG, the United States Government (USG), primarily via the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (the Global Fund). The findings have informed South Africa’s report to the UNAIDS Global AIDS Monitor and the country’s forthcoming funding request to the Global Fund.
Using Evidence to Design Health Benefit Plans for Stronger Health Systems: Le...HFG Project
Low- and middle-income country governments face competing health priorities as they try to increase their populations’ access to affordable healthcare with limited resources. Faced with difficult choices, how can governments align their spending with health system objectives? One common policy instrument governments are using is the health benefit plan (HBP), defined here as a pre-determined, publicly managed list of guaranteed health services. Based on country experiences, the authors of this report argue that using evidence improves the potential for HBPs to achieve and balance countries’ objectives for equity, efficiency, financial protection, and sustainability in the health sector.
Governments using—or considering—HBPs as part of their pathway to UHC are faced with complex questions as they prepare to design new HBPs or update existing ones to address technological, epidemiological, economic, or other changes. This report is intended to serve as a resource for these governments. Through a review of 25 countries examining the types of evidence used to design and update HBPs, this report identifies actionable lessons for designing HBPs that advance health systems objectives in a sustainable way. More: www.hfgproject.org and https://www.hfgproject.org/using-evidence-health-benefit-plans/
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.
Trinidad and Tobago 2015 Health Accounts - Main ReportHFG Project
This document summarizes the key findings of the 2015 health accounts report for Trinidad and Tobago. It finds that total health expenditure was 4.5 billion TT dollars in 2015, equivalent to 4.1% of GDP. The government financed 41% of health spending, while households financed 35% through direct out-of-pocket payments. Noncommunicable diseases accounted for the largest share of recurrent health spending at 42%. Out-of-pocket payments remain high, comprising over a third of total health expenditure. The report recommends strengthening government commitment to health financing, increasing risk pooling to reduce out-of-pocket spending, improving access to services, and institutionalizing ongoing health accounts estimations.
A Rapid Assessment of Key Areas of the NHSSP for Timor-Leste: Strengths, Chal...HFG Project
This document provides a rapid assessment of key areas of Timor-Leste's National Health Sector Strategic Plan (NHSSP) 2011-2030, identifying strengths, challenges, and opportunities. Three areas are recommended for USAID to focus on: financial management and administration, human resources for health (HRH) management, and procurement.
For financial management, challenges include declining donor support and budget cuts as oil revenues decrease. Most funds go to salaries, leaving little for services. Line-item budgeting is used. Improved resource allocation through need-based budgeting and staffing is suggested.
For HRH, numbers of health workers have grown but skills and distribution remain issues. Managerial capacity
Integrating the HIV Response at the Systems LevelHFG Project
The global response to combat the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic scaled up considerably in the early 2000s with the establishment of key institutions, notably the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund) and the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) (AIDS.gov 2018). In response to high global rates of AIDS-related morbidity and mortality, the internationally supported rapid scale-up of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevention, testing, treatment, and drug development is widely credited with curtailing a global epidemic, thereby limiting the human and financial costs of the virus (Bekker et al. 2018). Still the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) estimates that 1.8 million people were infected with HIV in 2017, and there are nearly 37 million people living with HIV (PLWHIV) worldwide (UNAIDS 2018a). In many countries, financing and governance of HIV services is transitioning from international donors to national governments.
This funding transition has major implications for the governance, management, and implementation of the HIV response. Governments undergoing funding transitions for the HIV response are integrating aspects of the response into systems and processes for governing, managing, financing, and delivering other essential
health services. But this phenomenon has not been systematically studied, and documentation on how governments achieve this is limited. Understanding how some governments are navigating an HIV funding transition may help other countries and the global health community to better design and plan future or ongoing efforts to transition national HIV responses to domestic resources for health. USAID’s HFG project is helping to fill this gap. In particular, this study helps build an evidence base by exploring whether and how four countries in the process of transitioning to greater domestic financing of their HIV response are integrating HIV programming with local systems and processes for other essential health services.
This study applies the concept of system integration to examine the alignment of rules, policies, and support systems to address HIV and other essential health services in four low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Specifically, the study explores the current extent of integration, the decisions faced by policymakers, and potential barriers/facilitators to integration in four countries. The analysis allows HFG to share lessons learned by each of these countries attempting to optimize rules, policy, and support systems for HIV and other essential health services.
Trinidad and Tobago 2015 Health Accounts Statistical Report.HFG Project
This document summarizes the key findings from the Trinidad and Tobago 2015 Health Accounts estimation. It provides context on the country's health system and epidemiological landscape. The health system is comprised of public and private sectors. The public sector is organized through five Regional Health Authorities. Noncommunicable diseases are a major burden, responsible for over 60% of deaths annually. HIV prevalence rose slightly to 1.65% in 2013. The Health Accounts study aimed to address important policy questions around sustainability, risk pooling, financial protection, efficiency, and disease burden to inform health financing and service delivery reforms. Primary and secondary data were collected from various institutional surveys and household sources then analyzed using the System of Health Accounts methodology.
Trinidad and Tobago Health Accounts BrochureHFG Project
The document summarizes key findings from Trinidad and Tobago's 2015 health accounts report. It finds that:
1) The government finances 90% of HIV spending and manages 95% of total HIV funding, though some donor funding is managed through the Ministry of Health.
2) Curative care accounts for 85% of HIV spending, with 12% spent on prevention and most outpatient care going to antiretroviral drug collection.
3) The government is the largest contributor to overall health spending, financing 55% through central and local management, while households contribute 44% through out-of-pocket payments.
Decentralization of health services in Nigeria by Dr Daniel Gobgab, CHANachapkenya
Nigeria has a population of 173 million people governed across 36 states and 774 local government areas. Health services are decentralized across three levels of government - federal, state, and local. The new National Health Act aims to improve healthcare access and quality through a basic healthcare provision fund and universal health coverage. Key challenges to decentralization include a lack of political will, limited local capacity and resources, and inequities in service distribution across areas.
This document discusses key topics in healthcare economics including health economics, demand and supply in healthcare markets, economic objectives in healthcare like efficiency and equity, concepts of economic efficiency applied to hospitals, healthcare expenditure trends globally and nationally, and priority areas for investing in health. It provides an overview of these essential healthcare economics concepts in 3 sentences or less.
The document provides an overview of Ontario's health care system. It discusses how the Ontario government operates under a Westminster system with a Liberal minority government led by Premier Dalton McGuinty. It outlines the roles of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and Local Health Integration Networks in developing health policy and overseeing service delivery. It also describes how physicians and hospitals are major private providers that receive public financing in Ontario's mixed public-private system.
The USAID Health Finance and Governance project in Angola helped the Ministry of Health develop a costed National Health Plan and monitoring and evaluation system to better advocate for health funding. Specifically:
1) HFG assisted MINSA in calculating a 12-year $6.3 billion budget to implement the National Health Plan, which helped gain approval and political support for increased health funding.
2) An M&E plan was developed and led to the creation of an M&E department at MINSA to track health spending and sector progress.
3) Efforts were made to establish a health accounting system to measure how funds are actually spent, but this was not completed due to a change in government leadership.
Health care financing in Saudi Arabia is provided mainly through government revenues, accounting for approximately 80% of total health care spending. Government spending on health as a percentage of the national budget has risen from 2.8% in 1970 to 6.4% in 2004. The remaining sources of health care financing include private sources such as personal out-of-pocket payments and employer-sponsored health insurance programs.
This document discusses health care financing. It begins by defining key terms related to health care financing sources, including public expenditures, external aid, and private expenditures. It then outlines the main mechanisms of health care financing: general revenue, social insurance contributions, private insurance premiums, community financing, and direct out-of-pocket payments. For each mechanism, it provides a brief definition and description. The document concludes by stating that the role of health financing should be recognized, that it cannot be dealt with separately from other factors like governance and economic growth, and that governments need to actively participate to avoid market failures.
Universal Health Coverage in Haryana: Setting Priorities for Health and Healt...HFG Project
In India, the reach of the public health system is limited; many people avoid seeking formal care because of its high cost or cultural barriers. As a result, they delay seeking care until they are seriously ill, which means higher costs when they seek care, high morbidity, and sometimes mortality that would have been preventable had care been sought earlier in the course of illness. This report provides Haryana a five-year road map for moving toward universal health coverage (UHC). It identifies key inputs that the state will need to effectively expand coverage of primary and secondary care by 2019/20 and estimates the cost of these inputs, in addition to other government-mandated increases.
Community-based health insurance achievements and recommendations for sustain...HFG Project
The document discusses community-based health insurance (CBHI) in Ethiopia. It provides details on:
- The goals and objectives of the USAID-funded project to implement CBHI across Ethiopia to improve access to and utilization of health services.
- The scale-up of CBHI from 13 pilot districts in 2010 to over 500 districts as of 2018, enrolling nearly 18 million people.
- The resources mobilized through CBHI, primarily from household contributions, with total funds increasing over twelve-fold from 2013-2017 to over 700 million Birr in 2016-2017.
Understanding Health Accounts: A Primer for PolicymakersHFG Project
An update of the 2003 brief, this new primer provides an introduction to Health Accounts, the framework (System of Health Accounts 2011 or SHA 2011), and key steps involved in conducting Health Accounts exercises using SHA 2011 with particular emphasis on how policymakers can get involved to facilitate the process. The primer also includes country experiences illustrating show how Health Accounts data can be used for policy purposes, with specific attention to the importance of institutionalizing Health Accounts so that it may serve as an ongoing resource to policymakers.
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing KitHFG Project
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing Kit is designed to help journalists and their editors uncover and tell these important health stories that affect people all around the world.
Engaging Civil Society in Health Finance and Governance: A Guide for Practiti...HFG Project
Governments and international donor organizations increasingly acknowledge the role of civil society organizations (CSOs) in strengthening health systems. By facilitating dialogue between government and citizens on issues of health sector priorities, performance, and accountability, CSOs can help to improve health service delivery and contribute to evidence-based policy. Often, however, CSOs lack the skills and tools needed to engage other stakeholders in issues of health finance and governance.
HFG’s guide provides governments and donors practical advice on engaging civil society in health finance and governance in order to meet health sector objectives and to improve health outcomes. Our guide describes the potential and limitations of civil society engagement entry points and presents an array of tools that may be used to do so.
Focusing specifically on the health sector, the HFG Guide offers practitioners a range of tools from which to choose based on the environment they work in and the objectives they seek to achieve. The guide emphasizes approaches that foster collaboration between public health officials and civil society that can improve access to and the quality of health services, ultimately contributing to improved health outcomes. This guide also seeks to provide practical mechanisms for how civil society engagement may be achieved, at the national, subnational, and community levels.
Maximizing Human Capital by Aligning Investments in Health and EducationHFG Project
There is a strong evidence base that identifies strategic investments in health and education across the life course that can maximize human capital development. Key opportunities exist during prenatal development and the first 1000 days, early childhood, school-age years, and adolescence to deliver cost-effective interventions that improve both health and education outcomes. Current global investments are imbalanced and miss opportunities for synergies between sectors. Coordinating health and education efforts, especially during school-age years, could enhance returns on investments and help populations reach their full potential.
Improving Efficiency to Achieve Health System Goals in Botswana: Background P...HFG Project
Health outcomes have improved in Botswana over the last few decades. These successes have come at the same time as overall macroeconomic growth, with annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth averaging around 6 percent between 2010 and 2015 (IMF 2015), and Human Development Index ranking above the regional average. These improvements originate in a strong health service delivery system. In 2008, Botswana’s public health system included 338 health posts and 277 health clinics, sufficient to ensure that at least 80 percent of the population has coverage of essential, high-impact services. Management of these services was initially done by the Ministry of Local Government but has been transferred to district health teams under the Ministry of Health (MOH). As of 2008, Botswana’s public health system also had 17 primary hospitals, 14 district hospitals, two referral hospitals, and one mental health hospital; these hospitals are managed by the central government.
South Africa HIV and TB Expenditure Review 2014/15 - 2016/17. Executive SummaryHFG Project
The South African Government (SAG) and its development partners have mounted a formidable response to the world’s largest HIV epidemic and a persistent burden of tuberculosis (TB), the country’s leading killer. Nearly 4 million South Africans initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) by the end of financial year 2016/17, helping to curtail new infections and reduce the number of annual HIV-related deaths. Mortality from TB has also declined thanks, in part, to improved treatment success.
Despite progress, challenges remain. Roughly 3 million people living with HIV (PLHIV) lack treatment, and each year more than a quarter million are newly infected. Moreover, nearly a half million South Africans contract TB every year, with an increasing share affected by drug-resistant strains.
To effectively plan and steward the health system, the SAG routinely monitors programmatic and financial performance of the response to HIV and TB, including by tracking expenditure. Analysis of spending, including trends in sources, levels, geographic and programmatic distribution and cost drivers can help policymakers to assess whether resources are reaching priority populations, interventions, and hotspot geographies; to identify potential opportunities to improve allocative and technical efficiency; and to stimulate more productive dialogue at multiple levels of the system.
This review of HIV and TB expenditure in South Africa is an input to policy, planning and management processes within and amongst spheres of government and between government and development partners. The data have been especially useful to national and provincial programme managers as they perform their oversight functions, leading to improved spending of available resources. With 52 annexes, it also serves as an authoritative reference document detailing levels and trends in HIV and TB spending by the three main funders of the disease responses: the SAG, the United States Government (USG), primarily via the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (the Global Fund). The findings have informed South Africa’s report to the UNAIDS Global AIDS Monitor and the country’s forthcoming funding request to the Global Fund.
Using Evidence to Design Health Benefit Plans for Stronger Health Systems: Le...HFG Project
Low- and middle-income country governments face competing health priorities as they try to increase their populations’ access to affordable healthcare with limited resources. Faced with difficult choices, how can governments align their spending with health system objectives? One common policy instrument governments are using is the health benefit plan (HBP), defined here as a pre-determined, publicly managed list of guaranteed health services. Based on country experiences, the authors of this report argue that using evidence improves the potential for HBPs to achieve and balance countries’ objectives for equity, efficiency, financial protection, and sustainability in the health sector.
Governments using—or considering—HBPs as part of their pathway to UHC are faced with complex questions as they prepare to design new HBPs or update existing ones to address technological, epidemiological, economic, or other changes. This report is intended to serve as a resource for these governments. Through a review of 25 countries examining the types of evidence used to design and update HBPs, this report identifies actionable lessons for designing HBPs that advance health systems objectives in a sustainable way. More: www.hfgproject.org and https://www.hfgproject.org/using-evidence-health-benefit-plans/
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.
Trinidad and Tobago 2015 Health Accounts - Main ReportHFG Project
This document summarizes the key findings of the 2015 health accounts report for Trinidad and Tobago. It finds that total health expenditure was 4.5 billion TT dollars in 2015, equivalent to 4.1% of GDP. The government financed 41% of health spending, while households financed 35% through direct out-of-pocket payments. Noncommunicable diseases accounted for the largest share of recurrent health spending at 42%. Out-of-pocket payments remain high, comprising over a third of total health expenditure. The report recommends strengthening government commitment to health financing, increasing risk pooling to reduce out-of-pocket spending, improving access to services, and institutionalizing ongoing health accounts estimations.
A Rapid Assessment of Key Areas of the NHSSP for Timor-Leste: Strengths, Chal...HFG Project
This document provides a rapid assessment of key areas of Timor-Leste's National Health Sector Strategic Plan (NHSSP) 2011-2030, identifying strengths, challenges, and opportunities. Three areas are recommended for USAID to focus on: financial management and administration, human resources for health (HRH) management, and procurement.
For financial management, challenges include declining donor support and budget cuts as oil revenues decrease. Most funds go to salaries, leaving little for services. Line-item budgeting is used. Improved resource allocation through need-based budgeting and staffing is suggested.
For HRH, numbers of health workers have grown but skills and distribution remain issues. Managerial capacity
Integrating the HIV Response at the Systems LevelHFG Project
The global response to combat the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic scaled up considerably in the early 2000s with the establishment of key institutions, notably the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund) and the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) (AIDS.gov 2018). In response to high global rates of AIDS-related morbidity and mortality, the internationally supported rapid scale-up of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevention, testing, treatment, and drug development is widely credited with curtailing a global epidemic, thereby limiting the human and financial costs of the virus (Bekker et al. 2018). Still the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) estimates that 1.8 million people were infected with HIV in 2017, and there are nearly 37 million people living with HIV (PLWHIV) worldwide (UNAIDS 2018a). In many countries, financing and governance of HIV services is transitioning from international donors to national governments.
This funding transition has major implications for the governance, management, and implementation of the HIV response. Governments undergoing funding transitions for the HIV response are integrating aspects of the response into systems and processes for governing, managing, financing, and delivering other essential
health services. But this phenomenon has not been systematically studied, and documentation on how governments achieve this is limited. Understanding how some governments are navigating an HIV funding transition may help other countries and the global health community to better design and plan future or ongoing efforts to transition national HIV responses to domestic resources for health. USAID’s HFG project is helping to fill this gap. In particular, this study helps build an evidence base by exploring whether and how four countries in the process of transitioning to greater domestic financing of their HIV response are integrating HIV programming with local systems and processes for other essential health services.
This study applies the concept of system integration to examine the alignment of rules, policies, and support systems to address HIV and other essential health services in four low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Specifically, the study explores the current extent of integration, the decisions faced by policymakers, and potential barriers/facilitators to integration in four countries. The analysis allows HFG to share lessons learned by each of these countries attempting to optimize rules, policy, and support systems for HIV and other essential health services.
Trinidad and Tobago 2015 Health Accounts Statistical Report.HFG Project
This document summarizes the key findings from the Trinidad and Tobago 2015 Health Accounts estimation. It provides context on the country's health system and epidemiological landscape. The health system is comprised of public and private sectors. The public sector is organized through five Regional Health Authorities. Noncommunicable diseases are a major burden, responsible for over 60% of deaths annually. HIV prevalence rose slightly to 1.65% in 2013. The Health Accounts study aimed to address important policy questions around sustainability, risk pooling, financial protection, efficiency, and disease burden to inform health financing and service delivery reforms. Primary and secondary data were collected from various institutional surveys and household sources then analyzed using the System of Health Accounts methodology.
Trinidad and Tobago Health Accounts BrochureHFG Project
The document summarizes key findings from Trinidad and Tobago's 2015 health accounts report. It finds that:
1) The government finances 90% of HIV spending and manages 95% of total HIV funding, though some donor funding is managed through the Ministry of Health.
2) Curative care accounts for 85% of HIV spending, with 12% spent on prevention and most outpatient care going to antiretroviral drug collection.
3) The government is the largest contributor to overall health spending, financing 55% through central and local management, while households contribute 44% through out-of-pocket payments.
Decentralization of health services in Nigeria by Dr Daniel Gobgab, CHANachapkenya
Nigeria has a population of 173 million people governed across 36 states and 774 local government areas. Health services are decentralized across three levels of government - federal, state, and local. The new National Health Act aims to improve healthcare access and quality through a basic healthcare provision fund and universal health coverage. Key challenges to decentralization include a lack of political will, limited local capacity and resources, and inequities in service distribution across areas.
This document discusses key topics in healthcare economics including health economics, demand and supply in healthcare markets, economic objectives in healthcare like efficiency and equity, concepts of economic efficiency applied to hospitals, healthcare expenditure trends globally and nationally, and priority areas for investing in health. It provides an overview of these essential healthcare economics concepts in 3 sentences or less.
The document provides an overview of Ontario's health care system. It discusses how the Ontario government operates under a Westminster system with a Liberal minority government led by Premier Dalton McGuinty. It outlines the roles of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and Local Health Integration Networks in developing health policy and overseeing service delivery. It also describes how physicians and hospitals are major private providers that receive public financing in Ontario's mixed public-private system.
The USAID Health Finance and Governance project in Angola helped the Ministry of Health develop a costed National Health Plan and monitoring and evaluation system to better advocate for health funding. Specifically:
1) HFG assisted MINSA in calculating a 12-year $6.3 billion budget to implement the National Health Plan, which helped gain approval and political support for increased health funding.
2) An M&E plan was developed and led to the creation of an M&E department at MINSA to track health spending and sector progress.
3) Efforts were made to establish a health accounting system to measure how funds are actually spent, but this was not completed due to a change in government leadership.
Health care financing in Saudi Arabia is provided mainly through government revenues, accounting for approximately 80% of total health care spending. Government spending on health as a percentage of the national budget has risen from 2.8% in 1970 to 6.4% in 2004. The remaining sources of health care financing include private sources such as personal out-of-pocket payments and employer-sponsored health insurance programs.
This document discusses health care financing. It begins by defining key terms related to health care financing sources, including public expenditures, external aid, and private expenditures. It then outlines the main mechanisms of health care financing: general revenue, social insurance contributions, private insurance premiums, community financing, and direct out-of-pocket payments. For each mechanism, it provides a brief definition and description. The document concludes by stating that the role of health financing should be recognized, that it cannot be dealt with separately from other factors like governance and economic growth, and that governments need to actively participate to avoid market failures.
Universal Health Coverage in Haryana: Setting Priorities for Health and Healt...HFG Project
In India, the reach of the public health system is limited; many people avoid seeking formal care because of its high cost or cultural barriers. As a result, they delay seeking care until they are seriously ill, which means higher costs when they seek care, high morbidity, and sometimes mortality that would have been preventable had care been sought earlier in the course of illness. This report provides Haryana a five-year road map for moving toward universal health coverage (UHC). It identifies key inputs that the state will need to effectively expand coverage of primary and secondary care by 2019/20 and estimates the cost of these inputs, in addition to other government-mandated increases.
Community-based health insurance achievements and recommendations for sustain...HFG Project
The document discusses community-based health insurance (CBHI) in Ethiopia. It provides details on:
- The goals and objectives of the USAID-funded project to implement CBHI across Ethiopia to improve access to and utilization of health services.
- The scale-up of CBHI from 13 pilot districts in 2010 to over 500 districts as of 2018, enrolling nearly 18 million people.
- The resources mobilized through CBHI, primarily from household contributions, with total funds increasing over twelve-fold from 2013-2017 to over 700 million Birr in 2016-2017.
Understanding Health Accounts: A Primer for PolicymakersHFG Project
An update of the 2003 brief, this new primer provides an introduction to Health Accounts, the framework (System of Health Accounts 2011 or SHA 2011), and key steps involved in conducting Health Accounts exercises using SHA 2011 with particular emphasis on how policymakers can get involved to facilitate the process. The primer also includes country experiences illustrating show how Health Accounts data can be used for policy purposes, with specific attention to the importance of institutionalizing Health Accounts so that it may serve as an ongoing resource to policymakers.
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing KitHFG Project
The Health Finance and Governance Briefing Kit is designed to help journalists and their editors uncover and tell these important health stories that affect people all around the world.
Engaging Civil Society in Health Finance and Governance: A Guide for Practiti...HFG Project
Governments and international donor organizations increasingly acknowledge the role of civil society organizations (CSOs) in strengthening health systems. By facilitating dialogue between government and citizens on issues of health sector priorities, performance, and accountability, CSOs can help to improve health service delivery and contribute to evidence-based policy. Often, however, CSOs lack the skills and tools needed to engage other stakeholders in issues of health finance and governance.
HFG’s guide provides governments and donors practical advice on engaging civil society in health finance and governance in order to meet health sector objectives and to improve health outcomes. Our guide describes the potential and limitations of civil society engagement entry points and presents an array of tools that may be used to do so.
Focusing specifically on the health sector, the HFG Guide offers practitioners a range of tools from which to choose based on the environment they work in and the objectives they seek to achieve. The guide emphasizes approaches that foster collaboration between public health officials and civil society that can improve access to and the quality of health services, ultimately contributing to improved health outcomes. This guide also seeks to provide practical mechanisms for how civil society engagement may be achieved, at the national, subnational, and community levels.
Public Financial Management, Health Governance, and Health SystemsHFG Project
While the importance of governance in a health system is well recognized, there is an overall lack of evidence and understanding of the dynamics of how improved governance can influence health system performance and health outcomes. There is still considerable debate on which governance interventions are appropriate for different contexts. This lack of evidence can result in avoidance of health governance efforts or an over-reliance on a limited set of governance interventions. As development partners and governments are increasing their emphasis on improving accountability and transparency of health systems and strengthening country policies and institutions to move towards universal health coverage (UHC), the need of this evidence is ever rising.
To address this evidence gap, the USAID’s Office of Health Systems (USAID/GH/OHS), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) Project launched an initiative in September 2016 to ‘Marshall the Evidence’ on how governance contributes to health system performance and improves health outcomes.
The overall objective of the initiative was to increase awareness and understanding of the evidence of what works and why in how governance contributes to health system performance, and how the field of health governance is evolving at the country level. This report provides a synthesis of the findings across the four themes. This report presents the findings of the Public Financial Management.
Introduction to Health Insurance Policy Options in Botswana: Improving Effici...HFG Project
The purpose of this report is to explore how insurance reforms could improve the efficiency and sustainability of the Botswana health system, and to offer specific policy recommendations to guide the development of a national health insurance reform proposal. The report builds on the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) Project’s support to the Ministry of Health (MOH) and the Health Financing Technical Working Group (HFTWG), and is one output of HFG and HFTWG’s joint development of a health financing strategy. Further, the report will inform HFG’s future technical assistance, which includes more quantitative analysis related to financing an insurance system and a fuller exploration of the feasibility of insurance reform.
Public Financial Management, Health Governance, and Health SystemsHFG Project
While the importance of governance in a health system is well recognized, there is an overall lack of evidence and understanding of the dynamics of how improved governance can influence health system performance and health outcomes. There is still considerable debate on which governance interventions are appropriate for different contexts. This lack of evidence can result in avoidance of health governance efforts or an over-reliance on a limited set of governance interventions. As development partners and governments are increasing their emphasis on improving accountability and transparency of health systems and strengthening country policies and institutions to move towards universal health coverage (UHC), the need of this evidence is ever rising.
To address this evidence gap, the USAID’s Office of Health Systems (USAID/GH/OHS), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) Project launched an initiative in September 2016 to ‘Marshall the Evidence’ on how governance contributes to health system performance and improves health outcomes.
The overall objective of the initiative was to increase awareness and understanding of the evidence of what works and why in how governance contributes to health system performance, and how the field of health governance is evolving at the country level. This report provides a synthesis of the findings across the four themes. This report presents the findings of the Public Financial Management.
Guide for the Monitoring and Evaluation of the Transition of Health ProgramsHFG Project
This guide looks at three different transition experiences (funding, technical assistance, and services) to demonstrate variations in the type of transition undertaken, and the corresponding need for M&E. The authors draw upon experience of monitoring and evaluating transition to clarify key elements and dimensions of transition and how they relate to the longer-term goal of program sustainability and to present possible indicators, relevant to different health programs and transition arrangements that can help track transition and offer suggestions on how to select appropriate indicators. This document provides a conceptual framework to guide thinking around the M&E of transitions and will be amended as experience grows.
2016 Foundational Practices for Health Equity State Self Assessment DRAFT Aug...Jim Bloyd
This document presents a learning and action tool to help state health departments advance health equity. It introduces key concepts like health equity, health disparities, social determinants of health, and structural inequities. It also presents a framework showing how social and economic conditions can impact health by influencing stress levels. The tool is intended to help organizations assess their capacity to address social determinants of health and transform practices to promote health equity.
Case study: Zambia Integrated Systems Strengthening Program (ZISSP)HFG Project
The Zambia Integrated Systems Strengthening Program (ZISSP) was a USAID-funded health systems strengthening project implemented from 2010-2014 in Zambia. ZISSP worked closely with the Ministry of Health and other partners to improve access and utilization of key health services. It used a whole-systems approach, focusing on strengthening specific program areas like HIV/AIDS, family planning, malaria, and maternal and child health. At the national level, ZISSP worked through technical working groups and with subcontractors to build capacity. It also decentralized training and seconded staff to provincial and district levels. In targeted districts, ZISSP improved community involvement through behavior change communication, small grants, and working
HFG Rapid Assessment of TB Payment and PFM Systems in the Philippines: Lesson...HFG Project
In the Philippines, there are roughly 290,000 new TB cases per year (WHO, 2016). Meanwhile, donor funding for TB has declined, health care costs are rising, and out-of-pocket spending accounts for roughly two-thirds of national TB expenditures. The Philippines needs to identify mechanisms to improve the efficiency of TB spending (i.e., mechanisms for spending money wisely). In the short term, this may mean finding ways to improve outputs—such as access, use of services, and quality—for a given level of spending on TB. In the long term, the Philippines and countries facing similar challenges may be interested in finding ways to achieve better outputs with fewer resources.
The Philippines was the subject of one of several country case studies linking strategic TB purchasing with improved efficiency and better outcomes. In April 2016, HFG conducted a brief but in-depth assessment of health purchasing/provider payment and PFM systems in the Philippines, to identify rigidities and barriers.
5 Tips to Lose Stomach Fat, Get Flat Six Pack Absmarktips
This report analyzes 300 weight loss advertisements from various media sources in 2001. It finds that false or misleading claims are common. Specifically, many ads make obviously exaggerated claims about rapid weight loss without diet or exercise. They also frequently use unrealistic before-and-after photos and consumer testimonials reporting large amounts of weight loss. When compared to ads from 1992, the report finds the number of weight loss product ads and the number of distinct products has greatly increased, indicating the weight loss advertising industry has expanded significantly over the past decade.
Governing Quality in Health Care on the Path to Universal Health Coverage: A ...HFG Project
As countries work to promote and achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC), maintaining and improving quality in health care is emerging as a priority. While research has been conducted on service delivery and financing schemes for UHC, little consolidated knowledge or guidance is available on institutional arrangements and their impact on quality of care in the context of UHC.
Responding to this need, the HFG project conducted a literature review to attempt to document global experience in institutional roles and relationships governing quality of care in the health sector, and to identify successful features or factors when structuring institutional roles, responsibilities, and relationships.
Progress in Institutionalizing Health Accounts in Indonesia: Where Next?HFG Project
1) The Health Finance and Governance Project provided technical assistance to help institutionalize Health Accounts production in Indonesia led by the Ministry of Health's Center for Health Financing and Health Insurance (PPJK) and the University of Indonesia (UI).
2) With this support, PPJK and UI produced the 2015 and 2016 Health Accounts and PPJK has increased its leadership and capacity to produce future accounts.
3) Challenges remain around maintaining expertise, deepening stakeholder relationships, disseminating data quickly, refining data sources, and expanding work at the sub-national level, but progress has been made in establishing regular production and use of Health Accounts data for policymaking in Indonesia.
Impact of Health Systems Strengthening on HealthHFG Project
Leaders in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) require timely and compelling evidence about how to strengthen their health systems to improve the health and well-being of their citizens. Yet, evidence on how to strengthen health system performance to achieve sustainable health improvements at scale, particularly toward Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Deaths (EPCMD), fostering an AIDS-Free Generation (AFG), and Protecting Communities against Infectious Diseases (PCID) is limited. The evidence that does exist is scattered, insufficiently analyzed, and not widely disseminated. Without evidence, decision-makers lack a sound basis for investing scarce health funds in health systems strengthening (HSS) in an environment of competing investment options.
USAID is committed to advancing the evidence base on HSS and this commissioned report clearly demonstrates that HSS can improve health in LMICs.
This report, based on a review of systematic reviews of the effects on health of HSS, presents a significant body of evidence linking HSS interventions to measureable impact on health for vulnerable people in LMICs. Making decisions on who delivers health services and where and how these services are organized is important to achieve priority health goals such as EPCMD, AFG, and PCID. The findings of this report document the value of investing in HSS.
Integrating Financing of Vertical Health Programs: Lessons from Kyrgyzstan an...HFG Project
This document summarizes case studies on transitions in financing vertical health programs in Kyrgyzstan and the Philippines. In Kyrgyzstan, tuberculosis services transitioned from being financed vertically to being integrated under mandatory health insurance. In the Philippines, family planning services transitioned from vertical financing to being covered by national health insurance. Key reasons for the transitions included aligning financing with universal health coverage goals and reducing fragmentation. Operationalizing the transitions involved defining benefit packages, adjusting provider payment methods, and coordinating stakeholders. The case studies provide lessons on successfully transitioning from vertical to integrated financing models.
Case Study: Improving Care through Patient-Centered Clinical Pharmacy Service...HFG Project
The Clinical Pharmacy activity in Ethiopia from 2012-2016 aimed to promote patient-centered pharmaceutical services. It trained over 200 pharmacists through a one-month in-service program. As a result, 53 of 65 hospitals implemented clinical pharmacy services. Key factors for its success included a supportive policy environment, stakeholder commitment, and an implementation plan to build staff capacity according to existing guidelines. The activity was part of broader Systems for Improved Access to Pharmaceuticals and Services (SIAPS) project in Ethiopia led by Management Sciences for Health.
Universal health coverage (UHC)—ensuring that everyone has access to quality, affordable health services when needed—can be a vehicle for improved equity, health, financial well-being, and economic development. In its 2013 report, Global Health 2035, the Commission on Investing in Health (CIH) made the case that progressive (“pro-poor”) pathways towards UHC, which target the poor from the outset, are the most efficient way to achieve both improved health outcomes and increased financial protection (FP). Countries worldwide are now embarking on health system changes to move closer to achieving UHC, often with a clear pro-poor intent. While they can draw on guidance related to the technical aspects of UHC (the “what” of UHC), such as on service package design, there is less information on the “how” of UHC—that is, on how to maximize the chances of successful implementation.
Motivated by a shared interest in helping to close this information gap, a diverse international group of 21 practitioners and academics, including ministry of health officials and representatives of global health agencies and foundations, convened at The Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center for a three-day workshop from July 7–9, 2015. The participants shared their experiences of implementing UHC and discussed the limited evidence on how to implement UHC, focusing on a set of seven key “how” questions from across five domains of UHC.
Key Element 4 Increase Upstream InvestmentsA population health .docxtawnyataylor528
Key Element 4: Increase Upstream Investments
A population health approach maximizes its potential by directing efforts and investments “upstream” to address root causes of health and illness.
What are upstream investments?
Upstream investments are interventions aimed at the root causes of a population health problem or benefit. Root causes are often identified by determining the most immediate and direct causes, and working backwards from there. In many cases, upstream action addresses social, economic and environmental conditions.
The population health approach is grounded in the notion that the earlier in the causal stream action is taken (i.e. the more upstream the action is), the greater the potential for population health gains and health-related cost savings. It is often true, however, that these root causes are more difficult to change, requiring more time, more resources and more will.
Because of this, upstream interventions may not be the most appropriate choice; the context, timing, resources, mandate and available evidence must be considered. The choice should be based on the best evidence, not just on an article of faith that “further upstream is always better.”
Resources to Increase Understanding:
What are upstream investments?
· The Case for Prevention: Moving Upstream to Improve Health of All Ontarians – Health Nexus (formerly the Ontario Prevention Clearinghouse)
Key questions
· a) What is the best balance of investments?
· b) Who will provide support and what will it be?
A) What is the best balance of investments?
A population health approach recognizes the tension between short and long term goals. Health problems have to be treated immediately, but at the same time, upstream investments are needed to keep people healthy. Furthermore, upstream investments need sustained support to have a real impact.
The population health approach strives to strike a balance between investments of three types:
· Short term, e.g. responding to citizen concerns about the quality and accessibility of health care, food and drug safety, and emergency response procedures
· Medium term, e.g. programs that favour equity, such as redistribution of resources, and programs that invest in children, such as responding to windows of developmental opportunity
· Long term, e.g. investment in alternative energy sources and other technologies that reduce stress on the physical environment.
B) Who will provide support and what will it be?
Taking upstream action on the social, economic and environmental health determinants requires influencing how multiple sectors of government assign their resources. In this Key Element, it is important to identify what investments by what partners outside health are required. To generate this list, consider all the sectors whose mandates impact upon health determinants and focus on those that are most relevant.
How are upstream investments increased?
4.1 Balance short, medium and long term investments
The decision-making fram ...
This document outlines a training manual for a hospital costing workshop. It provides an agenda for the 3-day workshop covering topics like the fundamentals of costing, the MASH costing tool, and calculating unit costs. The workshop aims to teach participants how to conduct costing exercises to understand their hospital's costs and improve management. Sessions include introductions, an overview of costing concepts, the costing process, and a demonstration of the MASH tool which is an Excel-based framework for tracking and analyzing hospital resources, services, and costs.
Guyana 2016 Health Accounts - Dissemination BriefHFG Project
The 2016 Guyana Health Accounts study found that:
1) Total health expenditure in Guyana was $28.6 billion (Guyanese dollars), with the government contributing 81% of funding.
2) The majority (71%) of health funds were spent on public health facilities like hospitals and clinics.
3) Most funds (64%) were spent on curative care services, while non-communicable diseases received the largest share (34%) of funds.
4) Government funding represents the largest source of financing for HIV/AIDS programs and services in Guyana, providing 62% of funds.
Guyana 2016 Health Accounts - Statistical ReportHFG Project
The document provides an overview of Guyana's 2016 Health Accounts methodology. It summarizes key aspects of the System of Health Accounts 2011 framework used, including boundaries, classifications, and definitions. Data was collected from government, households, NGOs, employers, insurers, and donors to track financial flows for health for 2016. The results help understand Guyana's health financing and answer questions on spending patterns.
Guyana 2016 Health Accounts - Main ReportHFG Project
The document summarizes the key findings of Guyana's first Health Accounts exercise for fiscal year 2016. It found that total health expenditure was G$ 28.6 billion, with the government contributing 81% of funding. Household out-of-pocket spending accounted for 9% of total spending. Non-communicable diseases received the largest share of spending at 34%. The analysis aims to inform strategic health financing decisions and assess domestic resource mobilization as external donor funding declines. Recommendations include increasing prevention spending and strengthening financial commitment to HIV programs.
The Next Frontier to Support Health Resource TrackingHFG Project
The document discusses challenges and opportunities for institutionalizing health resource tracking (HRT) in low- and middle-income countries. It identifies three key elements needed for institutionalization: strong demand for HRT data; sustainable local capacity to produce HRT data; and use of HRT results in policy and decision making. It outlines remaining challenges in each area and suggestions for future investments to address challenges, such as building understanding of HRT's value, maintaining local expertise, improving health information systems, and strengthening communication and use of HRT findings.
Rivers State has a population of over 7 million people from various ethnic groups. The main occupations are fishing, farming, and trading. The state has high rates of tuberculosis, neonatal and under-5 mortality, and HIV prevalence. Key stakeholders in health include the Ministry of Health, Ministry of Finance, and various agencies. The USAID Health Finance and Governance project worked to increase domestic health financing through advocacy, establishing a health insurance scheme, and capacity building. These efforts led to increased health budgets, establishment of healthcare financing units, and improved sustainability of health financing in Rivers State.
ASSESSMENT OF RMNCH FUNCTIONALITY IN HEALTH FACILITIES IN BAUCHI STATE, NIGERIAHFG Project
This document summarizes an assessment of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) services in health facilities in Bauchi State, Nigeria. It found that infrastructure like electricity, water and toilets were lacking in many facilities. There were also shortages of skilled healthcare workers, especially midwives, and staff training. While many facilities offered antenatal care and immunizations, availability of emergency obstetric and newborn care and services like postnatal care and post-abortion care were more limited. Supplies of essential medicines, equipment and guidelines were also often inadequate. Community outreach was provided by some facilities but could be expanded.
BAUCHI STATE, NIGERIA PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW 2012-2016 HFG Project
This document summarizes a public expenditure review of health spending in Bauchi State, Nigeria from 2012 to 2016. It finds that while Bauchi State's health budget increased over this period, actual health spending lagged behind budgeted amounts. Specifically, health spending accounted for a small and declining share of the state's total budget and expenditure. The review recommends that Bauchi State increase and better target public health funding to improve health outcomes and progress toward universal health coverage goals.
HEALTH INSURANCE: PRICING REPORT FOR MINIMUM HEALTH BENEFITS PACKAGE, RIVERS ...HFG Project
This document provides a pricing report for a Minimum Health Benefit Package (MHBP) being developed by Rivers State government in Nigeria. It analyzes the cost of 6 scenarios for the package, including individual and household premiums, based on medical claims data from hospitals in Rivers State from 2014-2017. The recommended annual premiums range from N14,026 to N111,734 for individuals and N79,946 to N636,882 for households, depending on the benefits included and the percentage of the state's population covered. The report provides context on data sources and actuarial assumptions used to determine the premiums.
The document is an actuarial report for Kano State's contributory healthcare benefit package in Nigeria. It analyzes 4 scenarios for the package - a basic minimum package alone or plus HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, or family planning services. The report finds that the estimated annual premium per individual would be between N12,180-N12,600 depending on the scenario, while the estimated annual premium per household of 6 would be between N73,081-N75,595. It provides these estimates by analyzing the state's population data, healthcare facilities, utilization rates, and costs to determine the risk premiums, administrative costs, marketing costs, and contingency margins for each scenario. The report recommends rounding the premium estimates and includes
Supplementary Actuarial Analysis of Tuberculosis, LAGOS STATE, NIGERIA HEALTH...HFG Project
This document provides an actuarial analysis of including tuberculosis (TB) coverage in the Lagos State Health Scheme in Nigeria. It analyzes 3 different TB treatment regimens and estimates the additional premium required. Based on historical TB case data from 2013-2016, it projects the number of cases and costs for the next 3 years. The analysis finds the additional premium to be 488.79 Naira on average per person to cover TB screening tests and the 3 treatment regimens. It acknowledges limitations in the source data and outlines key assumptions made in the projections.
Supplementary Actuarial Analysis of HIV/AIDS in Lagos State, NigeriaHFG Project
This document provides a supplementary actuarial analysis of including HIV/AIDS coverage in the Lagos State Health Scheme benefit package in Nigeria. It estimates the total additional medical cost to cover HIV/AIDS services would be 209.40 Naira per person per year, broken down into costs for HIV testing and counseling (13.60), antiretroviral therapy (133.05), and preventing mother-to-child transmission (15.96). The analysis is based on HIV service data from 2012-2016 and projected population and drug cost data from the Lagos State Ministry of Health. It assumes a 90% continuation and conversion rate for antiretroviral therapy and a 6.5% annual medical cost trend.
Assessment Of RMNCH Functionality In Health Facilities in Osun State, NigeriaHFG Project
This document summarizes an assessment of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health functionality in health facilities in Osun State, Nigeria. It was conducted by Abt Associates in collaboration with other organizations as part of the USAID Health Finance and Governance Project. The assessment aimed to determine service delivery readiness in primary health centers for the Basic Health Care Provision Fund pilot. Key findings included inadequate health facility infrastructure, shortages of health workers and equipment, and gaps in administrative and referral systems. The results provide baseline data on capacity for implementing health financing reforms in Osun State under the National Health Act.
karnataka housing board schemes . all schemesnarinav14
The Karnataka government, along with the central government’s Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY), offers various housing schemes to cater to the diverse needs of citizens across the state. This article provides a comprehensive overview of the major housing schemes available in the Karnataka housing board for both urban and rural areas in 2024.
How To Cultivate Community Affinity Throughout The Generosity JourneyAggregage
This session will dive into how to create rich generosity experiences that foster long-lasting relationships. You’ll walk away with actionable insights to redefine how you engage with your supporters — emphasizing trust, engagement, and community!
Bharat Mata - History of Indian culture.pdfBharat Mata
Bharat Mata Channel is an initiative towards keeping the culture of this country alive. Our effort is to spread the knowledge of Indian history, culture, religion and Vedas to the masses.
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
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 six-year, $209 million global project increases the use of both primary and priority health
services, including HIV and 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.
September 2017
Cooperative Agreement No: AID-OAA-A-12-00080
Submitted to: Scott Stewart,AOR
Jodi Charles, Sr. Health Systems Advisor
Office of Health Systems
Bureau for Global Health
Recommended Citation: Kanthor, Jeremy, Peter Dimitroff and Elizabeth Elfman.
September 2017. Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of
Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality. Bet hesda, MD: Health Finance &
Governance Project,Abt Associates Inc.
Photos: Courtesy of Photoshare, (www.photoshare.org).
Abt Associates
3. GUIDELINES FOR
PARLIAMENTARY STANDING COMMITTEES ON
OVERSIGHT OF PROGRAMMING TO
REDUCE CHILD AND MATERNAL MORTALITY
September 2017
This publication was produced for review by the United States Agency for International Development.
It was prepared by Jeremy Kanthor for the Health Finance and Governance Project.
The author’s views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) or the United States Government.
4.
5. Contents III
Contents
Acronyms...............................................................................................................................................v
Introduction......................................................................................................................................... vi
What are the objectives for these guidelines?....................................................................................vii
Who is the target audience for these guidelines?.............................................................................viii
How are these guidelines organized? What do these guidelines not cover?.....................................viii
Section 1: The Scale and Complexity of the Problem ........................................................................3
Key causes of preventable child death ................................................................................................5
Key causes of preventable maternal death ..........................................................................................6
Section 2: How Standing Committees Contribute to Oversight of Programming to
Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality ................................................................................................9
Reviewing health policies....................................................................................................................9
Monitoring policy implementation..................................................................................................11
Approving and monitoring budgets.................................................................................................13
Section 3: Tools for Parliamentary Committee Oversigh..................................................................19
Authority to conduct oversight.........................................................................................................19
Tools for oversight by committees....................................................................................................20
Section 4: Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health................................................25
Step 1: Determine how the government is addressing child and maternal health...........................25
Step 2: Oversight planning...............................................................................................................27
Step 3: Engaging partners.................................................................................................................32
Step 4: Applying metrics for child and maternal health oversight....................................................32
Section 5: Country-level Efforts to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality......................................35
Bangladesh........................................................................................................................................35
Ethiopia.............................................................................................................................................35
Kenya................................................................................................................................................36
Malawi..............................................................................................................................................36
Nepal.................................................................................................................................................36
Rwanda.............................................................................................................................................36
6.
7. Acronyms V
Acronyms
CHWS Counseling Health and Wellness Services
CPD Cephalopelvic Disproportion
CSBA Community Skilled Birth Attendants
CSO Civil Society Organization
DfID Department for International Development
EmOC Emergency Obstetric Care
EPCMD Ending Preventable Child and Maternal Deaths
EPHS Essential Package of Health Services
FCHV Female Community Health Volunteers
HBP Health Benefit Plans
HEP Health Extension Program
ITN Insecticide-treated Bednets
MDG Millennium Development Goal
MHCH Maternal Health and Child Health
MP Member of Parliament
NGO Non-governmental Organization
ORS Oral Rehydration Salts
PMNCH Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund
UNPFA United Nations Population Fund
USAID United States Agency for International Development
WHO World Health Organization
8. VI Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Public health responses to priority health
challenges are complex, technical, and involve
numerous institutions, funding sources, and
commitments to international strategies. Efforts
to end preventable child and maternal deaths, for
example, may include initiatives targeting both
child and maternal health, malaria, immunizations
and nutrition, among others. This guide will
use maternal health and child health as themes
to illustrate the challenges that face MPs and
parliamentary committees while addressing these
complex issues, however the approaches described
here can be employed in a variety of contexts
within the health field as well as other public policy
areas. In addition, for the purposes of this guide,
it is important to note how efforts to reduce child
and maternal mortality differ and converge with
the broader effort to improve maternal and child
health. While these two are closely related, they
are not identical. Improving child and maternal
health is an umbrella term that addresses a full
range of efforts to help pregnant women and
children thrive. Programming to reduce child and
maternal mortality seeks to target the key causes
of preventable deaths of pregnant women and
children under 5 years of age. The approaches and
techniques discussed here can apply to variety of
situations facing standing health committees as they
seek to develop their objectives and action plans.
There have been several efforts to engage Parliaments
in issues of maternal and child health, including the
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and
Development’s “Maternal Health: An Advocacy Guide
Introduction
for Parliamentarians”1
and the Inter-Parliamentary
Union’s “Sustaining Parliamentary Action to Improve
Maternal, Newborn and Child Health.”2
These
guides focus on the role of individual Members of
Parliament (MPs) and what they can do to address
issues of maternal and child survival. These guides also
emphasize increasing MPs’ understanding of maternal
and child health issues over the specific parliamentary
mechanisms for increasing oversight and monitoring
government performance.
At an individual level, MPs have limited authority and
mechanisms to conduct oversight over government
performance or review budgets. In this light,
empowering committees, rather than individual
members, can provide a more effective method
for promoting external oversight over government
efforts to improve maternal and child survival. The
vast majority of Parliaments today employ a system
of both standing and ad hoc committees, Standing
Committees have the responsibility for monitoring
government performance and conducting oversight
on how public resources are allocated and spent,
often with a sector specific portfolio, while ad hoc
committees are struck to address a specific, and often
urgent, issue and have a limited lifespan. It is not
unusual for Parliaments to group sectors together
under one committee, as one finds in Afghanistan
1
Chatterjee, Subeditor. Maternal Health: An Advocacy Guide for
Parliamentarians. Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and
Development (AFPPD). 2010. Web [http://www.commonhealth.in/
pdf/47.pdf]
2
Long, Sian, et. al. Sustaining Parliamentary Action to Improve Maternal,
Newborn and Child Health. Inter-Parliamentary Union. Handbook
for Parliamentarians No.21. 2013. Web [http://www.ipu.org/PDF/
publications/mnch-e.pdf]
9. Introduction VII
(Commission on Health, Sports, Labor, and Workers),
Senegal (Committee on Health, Population, Social
Affairs and National Solidarity) and Zambia (Health,
Community Development and Social Services).
Other countries may have standing committees with
sole responsibility for health (such as in Ghana and
Kenya). Standing committees will have defined roles
and authorities, including reviewing the sector budget,
holding hearings, and calling witnesses, Committees
also typically have staff support to provide research
and analytical services.
The rate of child and maternal mortality is affected
by a myriad of factors, including access to clean water,
nutrition, and community infrastructure. Because of
the complexity of a government’s response to child
and maternal mortality, Standing Committees for
Health can find it difficult to assess whether priorities
are being achieved, international commitments are
being met and adequate funds are being allocated.
Committee members and their staff support may
not be familiar with Health Ministry priorities or
methods for assessing performance. The Ministry may
not articulate clear standards on which to measure
performance. In addition, while committees can serve
as advocates for increasing allocations to underfunded
health priorities, the lack of oversight over child and
maternal mortality diminishes the Parliament’s ability
to assess whether sufficient funds are being allocated
to health and how those funds are being spent.
What are the objectives for
these guidelines?
This guide has three key objectives:
`` Position efforts to reduce child and maternal
morality within the portfolio of a standing
committee of health. Because the challenge of
reducing child and maternal mortality is an issue
that cuts across numerous health programs and
social sectors, it is important to position the goal
of ending preventable deaths within the broader
mandate of a standing committee of health. There
is rarely a dedicated child and maternal health
budget to scrutinize, nor specific staff to question,
let alone stand alone programming to reduce
maternal and child mortality. This guide will build
the awareness for Members and staff of standing
committees on the principle causes for maternal
and child deaths and how this relates to their
broader health sector oversight.
`` Review possible standing committee oversight tools
relevant for the oversight of health programming.
Committees have a varying degree of tools at their
disposal to conduct oversight over budgets and
policies. This guide will review these possible tools
through the lens of efforts to reduce child and
maternal mortality.
`` Provide practical approaches for how standing
committees can implement plans. This guide offers
practical guidance for how Committee chairs, MPs,
and committee staff can conduct robust and regular
oversight over progress towards reducing child and
maternal mortality in their countries.
10. VIII Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
USAID’s EPCMD Priority Countries
As part of its approach to this issue, USAID has
designated 25 priority countries; together these
25 countries account for 70% of preventable
child and maternal deaths, and are therefore
critical to achieving advances in this area.
Who is the target audience for
these guidelines?
Although these guidelines and the approaches
described within can be applied to any targeted
health issue, they are focused on child and maternal
death due to the scale of the problem in the 25
priority countries listed above, and its preventable
nature. As such, these guidelines are intended for
two key audiences. The primary audience is the
Health committees in 25 Priority countries. For
most countries, these guidelines are applicable to the
national parliament; for those countries (Nigeria,
Ethiopia) with regional or state legislatures, these
guidelines may also be applicable. The target audience
is inclusive of the Committee chairs, MPs sitting on
the committee, and the staff assigned to support the
committee. The guidelines provide information and
strategies for asking the right questions, requesting
the right information and taking a leading role in
building public awareness around the goal of ending
preventable child and maternal deaths. The second
audience is donors and organizations that support
Parliaments in countries where maternal and child
deaths remain a significant issue. Lastly the guidelines
may be useful for civil society groups to understand
the potential role of standing committees on health,
and how they may most effectively interact with these
important actors.
How are these guidelines
organized? What do these
guidelines not cover?
In Section 2, we position child and maternal mortality
into the broader mandate of a Standing Committee
on Health by present an overview of the key causes
of preventable deaths and country experience in
achieving success. In Sections 3 and 4, we present
several committee oversight tools and describe how
they can be applied to health oversight. In Section
5, we provide strategies for using oversight tools to
monitor the performance of child and maternal
mortality initiatives and effectiveness of funding spent
in this area. In Section 6, we present examples of
how selected countries (to be more specific, USAID’s
‘EPCMD priority countries’) have achieved success in
reduction maternal and child mortality rates.
These guidelines are not a reference on ending
preventable maternal and child deaths. While they
provide some summary information in Section 2
on the primary causes for preventable deaths, those
seeking more detailed materials can reference the
following:
`` Acting on the Call: Ending Preventable Child and
Maternal Deaths: A Focus on Equity USAID,
2016:
https://issuu.com/usaid/docs/usaid_2016_mcs_
aotc_brochure_v15_si/1?e=4465259/36650940
`` Trends in Maternal Mortality 1990 – 2015, WHO,
2015:
http://apps.who.int/iris/
bitstream/10665/194254/1/9789241565141_eng.
pdf?ua=1
11. SECTIONS
Section 1: The Scale and Complexity of the Problem
Section 2: How Standing Committees Contribute to
Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Section 3: Tools for Parliamentary Committee Oversigh
Section 4: Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health
Section 5: Country-level Efforts to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
12.
13. I. The Scale and Complexity of the Problem 3
UNICEF estimates that in 2015, nearly 6
million children under the age of 5 years died
of preventable causes, 75% of whom were less than a
year old. The World Health Organization estimates
that in 2013, 289,000 women died while pregnant
or shortly after terminating their pregnancy. While
both infant mortality and maternal mortality rates
have declined significantly over the last 20 years,
these recent figures are a stark reminder of the
hazards faced by mothers and children.
To ground this guidebook in the realities of child and
maternal deaths, Table 1 presents the data on the child
and maternal deaths globally and for each of the
25 USAID priority countries.
The effort to address child and maternal deaths is
very complex; while globally the major causes are
known, each country has its own profile with different
factors, both direct and indirect, and country specific
- with some causes being more significant than
others depending on the country. This means there
is no standard approach that can be replicated across
countries; what is needed in South Sudan is very
different from what is needed Pakistan.
Section 1: The Scale and Complexity of
the Problem
In addition, in any one country there is rarely a single
initiative or dedicated funding source for this type
of health programming. Rather, efforts to promote
maternal and child health are supported through
numerous health programs, by multiple donors and
potentially across numerous social sectors. This has
significant implications to the oversight of country
efforts to reduce preventable deaths - it can be difficult
to discern an overall strategy, who is in charge for
executing that strategy, and how funds are being spent
to achieve the strategy. As these guidelines will discuss
later, it is imperative that the standing committees
on Health undertake an effort to identify and map
the various actors and organizations involved in child
and maternal health, at the national, sub-national and
municipal levels.
14. 4 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Table 1: Child and Maternal Death Data
Country
1990
Maternal
Deaths3
2015
Maternal
Deaths
1990 Maternal
mortality ratio
(per 100 000
live births)
2015 Maternal
mortality ratio
(per 100 000
live births)
1990
Child
Deaths4
2015
Child
Deaths
1990 Child
Death Rate
(per 1000
live births)5
2015 Child
Death Rate
(per 1000
live births)
Global
Afghanistan 8 400 4 300 1 340 396 100437 94261 181 91
Bangladesh 21 000 5 500 569 176 527587 119326 144 38
Myanmar
(Burma)
5100 1700 453 178 120691 46284 110 50
DRC 15 000 22 000 879 693 294179 304558 187 98
Ethiopia 29 000 11 000 1 250 353 446103 184186 205 59
Ghana 3 600 2 800 634 319 69971 54061 127 62
Haiti 1 700 950 625 359 36833 17841 146 69
India 152 000 45 000 556 174 3357317 1200998 126 48
Indonesia 21 000 6 400 446 126 395094 147162 85 27
Kenya 6 800 8 000 687 510 99742 74429 102 49
Liberia 1 400 1 100 1 500 725 23307 10509 255 70
Madagascar 4 100 2 900 778 353 81636 40075 161 50
Malawi 4300 4200 957 634 105576 40048 242 64
Mali 4200 4400 1010 587 98211 82710 254 115
Mozambique 8700 5300 1390 489 140492 82387 240 79
Nepal 6600 1500 901 258 97907 19900 141 36
Nigeria 57000 58000 1350 814 848601 750111 213 109
Pakistan 19000 9700 431 178 592722 431568 139 81
Rwanda 4200 1100 1300 290 50493 14207 152 42
Senegal 1800 1800 540 315 43760 27059 140 47
South Sudan 6300 4100 744 311 66316 39487 253 93
Tanzania 11000 8200 997 398 177635 98180 165 49
Uganda 5900 5700 687 343 151343 85291 187 55
Yemen 3500 3300 547 385 74895 34351 126 42
Zambia 2200 1400 577 224 69664 38990 191 64
3
World Health Organization (WHO). Global Health Observatory Data Repository. Maternal Mortality: Data by Country. 2015.
Web [http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.15]
4
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). Child Survival: Under-five Mortality. June 2016.
Web. [http://data.unicef.org/child-mortality/under-five.html]
5
The World Bank. 2.21 World Development Indicators: Mortality. 2014. Web. [http://wdi.worldbank.org/table/2.21]
15. I. The Scale and Complexity of the Problem 5
Key causes of preventable child
death
Over the past 25 years, the number of children
who die of preventable causes before reaching
their fifth birthday has fallen by more than half.
While concerted global efforts have led to dramatic
reductions in under-five mortality, progress has not
been enough to achieve the Sustainable Development
Goal (SDG) 3.2’s target of ending preventable deaths
of newborns and children under five years of age, with
all countries aiming to reduce neonatal mortality to
at least as low as 12 per 1,000 live births and under-5
mortality to at least as low as 25 per 1,000 live births
by 2030. Most under-five deaths are still caused by
diseases that are readily preventable or treatable with
proven, cost-effective interventions. Pneumonia,
diarrhea, and malaria are main killers of children
under age 5; preterm birth and intrapartum-related
complications are responsible for the majority of
neonatal deaths.61
`` Pneumonia. When children become ill and show
signs of pneumonia, they need to receive a prompt
diagnosis and treatment from a facility-based
health provider or a qualified community health
worker. Progress in reducing pneumonia-related
deaths requires quickly seeking care from a health
care provider once children develop symptoms of
pneumonia, followed by appropriate treatment
with antibiotics for bacterial pneumonia.
`` Diarrhea. As with pneumonia, decreasing deaths
in children from diarrhea requires both prevention
and appropriate treatment. Improvements
in drinking water, sanitation and hygiene are
essential for preventing diarrheal infections and
other diseases. When children do become ill with
diarrhea, one of the most effective treatments is
both inexpensive and easy to administer—oral
rehydration salts (ORS). Today, just two in five
children who become ill with diarrhea receive ORS.
6
“Other” post-neonatal period deaths account for the
biggest number of under-five deaths. Because this is a
catchall category, it is excluded in our detailed summary.
`` Malaria. In malaria endemic regions, vector control
is one of the most effective interventions for
prevention. Malaria prevention efforts have focused
heavily on increasing the use of insecticide-treated
bednets (ITNs) to prevent transmission. When
children do show signs of malaria, appropriate and
rapid diagnosis is necessary before administering
treatment. The WHO updated its treatment
recommendations in 2010 to recommend a
confirmatory diagnostic test for young children
with fevers in malaria-endemic areas. This is to
counter the systematic treatment of children who
showed signs of fever with an antimalarial, which
could cause the development of parasite resistance.
`` Preterm birth. Prematurity is the leading cause
of newborn deaths. In low-income settings, half
of the babies born at 32 weeks (two months
early) continue to die due to a lack of feasible,
cost-effective care, such as warmth, breastfeeding
support, and basic care for infections and breathing
difficulties. Family planning, and increased
empowerment of women, especially adolescents,
plus improved quality of care before, between and
during pregnancy can help to reduce preterm birth
rates.
`` Intrapartum-related complications. A major cause
of intrapartum or early very neonatal death is
asphyxia, which can result from poorly managed
obstetric complications and from the absence of
neonatal resuscitation. Good quality intrapartum
care is crucial for both mothers and their infants,
and where appropriate and timely care is provided,
most maternal and neonatal deaths can be
prevented.
16. 6 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Key causes of preventable
maternal death
Every day, approximately 830 women die from causes
related to pregnancy and childbirth: most of these
deaths could have been prevented. While efforts
have been made to achieve SDG 3.1 - reducing the
global maternal mortality ratio to less than 70 per
100,000 live births by 2030- the lifetime risk of
death due to pregnancy and childbirth is still high
for women living in developing countries where 99%
of all maternal deaths occur. The high number of
maternal deaths in some areas of the world reflects
inequities in access to health services, as well as weak
health systems that result in poor health outcomes.
High maternal mortality rates however, are not due
exclusively to factors related to economic or human
resources limitations rather the death of a women
during childbirth is the product of numerous elements
often all related to a delay in care. The WHO defines
such delays in a model titled “the three-delay model”
which designates the delays most likely to adversely
affect the ability of women to seek or reach care. The
delays identified in the model include: 1) delay in the
decision to access care 2) delay in transportation to a
medical facility 3) delay in the receipt of adequate and
appropriate treatment.
Delays in care often result in maternal mortality,
but the actual complications that women die of
during and following pregnancy and childbirth are
usually preventable or treatable. The leading causes of
maternal deaths include:
`` Hemorrhaging. After giving birth a woman is
most at risk for hemorrhaging - if left unattended
severe bleeding can kill a woman within hours.
Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is responsible for
approximately 27 percent of maternal mortality
worldwide. To help offset the risk of a hemorrhage
all births need to be attended by skilled health
professionals with care and support during and
after childbirth. Given immediately post-birth
uterotonics can decrease blood loss and help
prevent 50 percent to 60 percent of PPH.
`` Sepsis. After childbirth, the chance for sepsis is
very high due to the stress that birthing places on
a woman’s body. To prevent and manage the risk
of infections, birthing sites need to practice good
hygiene with high standards for infection control.
Clean delivery kits and health education can help
reduce infection rates, but many of the crucial
factors that give rise to unclean delivery are usually
related to poverty and lack of facilities. To help
offset the chance of infection, early detection needs
to occur with appropriate prenatal testing and
treatment of maternal infection and appropriate use
of intravenous or intramuscular antibiotics during
the labor and post-partum periods.
`` Hypertension (pre-eclampsia and eclampsia).
Hypertensive disorders are the second highest direct
obstetric cause of maternal death and account for
14 percent of maternal deaths. Pre-eclampsia can
be identified in the prenatal stage by monitoring
blood pressure, screening urine for protein, and
through physical assessment. If pre-eclampsia is
left untreated it can lead to exclampsia, which is
characterized by kidney failure, seizures, and coma
during pregnancy or post-partum. To prevent pre-
eclampsia/eclampsia, low-dose aspirin and calcium
supplements should be given as deterrents before
birth.
`` Complications from delivery/direct causes. Many
women can experience a prolonged or obstructed
labor with an increased incidence among women
with poor nutritional status. Women can also
experience cephalopelvic disproportion (CPD) - a
disproportion between the size of the fetal head
and the maternal pelvis or by the position of the
fetus at the time of delivery – the leading cause of
obstetrical fistulas. To help deter complications
the use of assisted vaginal delivery methods such
as forceps, vacuum extractor, or performing a
Caesarean can prevent adverse outcomes.
17. I. The Scale and Complexity of the Problem 7
`` Unsafe abortions. Approximately 67,000 cases of
abortion related deaths occur each year. Unsafe
abortion accounts for approximately 8 percent
of global maternal deaths. Unsafe abortions can
cause severe infections, as well as bleeding from the
procedure or organ damage all of which risk the life
of a woman. The prevention of unsafe abortions
and subsequent maternal deaths can be avoided
with the provision of safe abortions, quality family
planning services, and competent post-abortion
care.
`` Indirect causes. Pre-existing medical conditions
such as anemia, malaria, hepatitis, heart disease,
and HIV/AIDS can increase the risk of maternal
death. To reduce the risk of disease complicating
pregnancy and childbirth prenatal identification
and treatment, as well as the availability of
appropriate basic emergency obstetric care (EmOC)
are necessary at the time of delivery.
Women around the globe still do not receive the
maternal health care and family planning services
they need to survive pregnancy and thrive. To help
end preventable maternal deaths all women, including
adolescents, need access to well-equipped health
facilities with trained staff, contraception, and if
allowed by the country safe abortion services, and
quality post-abortion care. It is also vital to prevent
unwanted and too-early pregnancies. Understanding
the causes of maternal death and their subsequent
life-saving interventions is key to saving women from a
preventable death.
18.
19. 3. Tools for Parliamentary Committee Oversigh 9
Section 2: How Standing Committees
Contribute to Oversight of Programming to
Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Parliamentary Standing Committees typically
have three major functions:
`` Review and deliberate on policy development -
Standing committees usually are responsible for
deliberating and commenting on draft laws that
address the health sector, including those that
define the health services available to women and
children.
`` Monitoring policy implementation – Once
policies are passed, and implementing regulations
are in place, Standing committees typically serve a
role of monitoring the performance of government
programs, including those addressing preventable
child and maternal deaths.
`` Approve budgets and/or monitor budget
execution – Many, but not all, standing committees
are charged with reviewing and commenting on the
annual health budget. Once the budget is passed,
standing committees monitor how funds are spent.
The following section outlines how standing
committees can apply these functions to the effort to
end preventable child and maternal deaths.
Reviewing health policies
There are several national level policies that are
relevant to efforts to reduce preventable child and
maternal deaths. Below, some key policies are
described along with how Standing Committees
might contribute to their review.
`` Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS):
An EPHS is a policy statement that outlines the
package of health services that the government
provides or aspires to provide to its citizens in an
equitable manner. EPHS’ often include a list of
priority reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child
health (RMNCH) interventions that encompass
child and maternal health interventions as well as a
larger set of interventions for high priority groups.
The EPHS serves as a policy statement of what
health services should be available to all citizens.
The Standing Committee can review the EPHS
and advocate that future revisions:
a. Include, with specificity and not simply with
general references, the maternal and child
health interventions that are key to reducing
child and maternal mortality;
b. Reflect the issues of equity – that women and
children with less access to quality health care
(whether due to geographic location, income
level, or other socio-economic reasons that
make them vulnerable) are more susceptible to
maternal or child morbidity and mortality.
20. 10 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
c. Outline clearly how the policy objectives in
the EPHS will be achieved.
`` Health Benefit Plans (HBP): A HBP is a list of
guaranteed health services, accessed at approved
health care providers by specified populations,
with pre-established levels of financial support
for beneficiaries. In contrast to an EPHS, which
is a statement of policy, a HBP requires specific
and clear funding mechanisms, including social
insurance schemes. The definition of a HBP
requires decisions about what segments of the
population are entitled to different services. This
rationing of priority services may be explicit –
specifically including or excluding by policy certain
population groups from services. The rationing
may also be implicit – limiting services to the
public due to their limited availability.
The HBP serves as a key policy mechanism for a
country to determine what services will be available
to citizens and the funding required to delivery it.
The Standing Committee can review the HBP and
advocate that future revisions:
a. Include, with specificity, priority maternal
and child health interventions that are key to
reducing mortality rates;
b. Become more equitable – ensuring that those
women and children who are most vulnerable
to preventable deaths are covered by the HBP
and that services included in the HBP are
actually available; and
c. Enhance sustainability – scrutinizing the HBP
to ensure funding is sufficient to delivery
priority services aimed at reducing child and
maternal mortality.
`` National Commitments: Countries regularly
make commitments to achieve levels of health
performance or targets for access, availability
and coverage in line with the SDG’s – which is a
positive, enabling factor because it demonstrates
that countries are committed to achieving the goal
of reducing child and maternal death. For example,
all of the 24 EPCMD priority countries have made
commitments on improving achievements in family
planning, and many have made commitments
specifically relating to child and maternal mortality.
21. 2. How Standing Committees Contribute to Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality 11
These commitments are typically not approved by
parliament, nor have the power of law. Nonetheless,
a standing committee can review their country’s
national commitments and advocate for their
achievement by:
a. Ensuring these commitments are reflected
in policy and budgets. Standing committees
can monitor and inquire how subsequent
health policies and decisions on funding
levels are consistent with these international
commitments.
b. Increasing public awareness of these
commitments. Often governments make these
commitments with little publicity. Standing
committees can use the media coverage of
their work to raise public awareness of these
commitments.
Monitoring policy
implementation
Once policies are in place, a standing committee
can play a role in monitoring how they are
put into practice. Sections 3 and 4 outline different
tools at a Committee’s disposal to do this type of
monitoring. The following section details aspects of
health policy implementation that are particularly
relevant to child and maternal mortality.
`` Data Availability: A national effort to end
preventable maternal and child deaths requires
strong surveillance and the collection and analysis
of high quality data on health system performance
and coverage. Health policy makers need to know
whether priority interventions are being put into
practice and where and why preventable deaths are
happening. This information must be documented
at the point of service delivery and aggregated
up to provide a national picture of both how
effectively services are being delivered and where
there are problems. It is also necessary to document
behaviors and the use of interventions to help guide
community health measures and identify the gaps in
care. Reliable, high quality and timely data necessary
for a strong response, however, is not always available.
A study of maternal and newborn health information
collected in 13 countries71
(Bangladesh, Ethiopia,
India, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Nepal,
Nigeria, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe)
documented the inconsistent collection of data on
17 key intervention during pregnancy, birth, and
postpartum periods.
Likewise, while documentation of maternal and
newborn complications is high – 11 of the 13
countries document complications; how these
complications are managed and treated is weak and
inconsistent. To end preventable deaths, health policy
makers need to understand what treatments are being
offered, what is effective, and what is ineffective.
7
Divehi, Vikas. et. al. The Maternal and Child Health Integrated Program
(MCHIP). November 2014. A Review of the Maternal and Newborn
Health Content of National Health Management Information Systems
in 13 Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Washington, DC.
Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP).
22. 12 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
In this light, the standing committee can be an
important advocate for the public health sector
to improve data collection. Ending preventable
deaths requires a firm understanding of where and
why those preventable deaths are happening, what
segments of the population are most affected, and
whether proven interventions are being targeted to
at-risk populations. The standing committee can
advocate for improved data collection by:
a. Promoting data and evidence driven policy
decisions. The committee should ask for the
data used by policy makers when making
decisions and what data is collected as policies
and programs are being implemented.
b. Filling data gaps. When public health officials
report that they don’t have data on a particular
issue, the committee should continue to
follow up to advocate that the data be
collected.
c. Strengthening data collection systems and
sources. The committee can seek to increase
investments in the health information systems
ministries use to collect and analyze data. The
committee can seek funding for household
data collection through demographic
and health surveys which can strengthen
understanding on health behavior and use of
interventions such as bednets.
`` Equity of child and maternal health efforts:
Promoting equity, particularly in health care for
mothers and children, means that all citizens
have access to quality health services, regardless of
their socio-economic position. There are several
factors that can make women and children more
vulnerable to preventable deaths than others. For
example a study on data from Ghana, Kenya and
Ethiopia on four indicators relevant to child and
maternal mortality: use of a skilled birth attendant
during delivery, contraceptive prevalence rate,
AIDS knowledge and access to a health facility,
looked at several dimensions of vulnerability:
poverty status, education, region, ethnicity and
the more traditional wealth quintile.82
The study
found that all the dimensions of vulnerability had
an impact on access to health services. Importantly,
the study found that each country had a unique
inequity profile. For example, for some countries
urban populations were less served, while in
others rural populations had less access to services.
Likewise, a study of maternal and child health care
coverage in 28 states in India found that across all
states, those in the wealthiest fifth of the population
had more access to health care than those in poorer
quintiles. In some states, the wealthy had two times
the access to maternal and child care.93
The standing committee can work to ensure that
health programming focused on reducing child
and maternal mortality is equitable by insisting
that health programs are specifically designed to
address women and children most vulnerable to
preventable deaths. The following factors should be
considered:
zz Has the program or policy been designed
to promote equity? Does it include a
commitment to Universal Healthcare (UHC)
and/or strategies or policies supporting UHC
which address equity?
zz Poverty – will the health policy or program
specifically target poor women and children
to ensure they are covered by priority health
services and efforts? Will the program or
policy focus specifically on reducing the out
of pocket expenditures (which serves as an
obstacle for services) of the poor for maternal
and child health services?
zz Marginalized populations – will the public
health initiative focus on those segments of
the population most marginalized – including
ethnic and religious minorities, the less
educated, etc.?
8
Wirth, Meg. et. al. “Delivering” on the MDGS?: Equity and Maternal
Health in Ghana Ethiopia and Kenya. East Afr J Public Health. 2008
Dec; 5(3): 133-141. Web. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/
PMC4414036/]
9
Singh, Prashant K. et. al. Equity in Maternal, Newborn, and Child
Health Care Coverage in India. International Institute for Population
Sciences. 10 September 2013. Global Health Action. Web. [http://www.
globalhealthaction.net/index.php/gha/article/view/22217]
23. 2. How Standing Committees Contribute to Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality 13
zz Rural and/or urban populations – will the
program or policy promote the location
and distribution of public health resources
(including infrastructure and public
health professionals) to enhance access to
underserved populations?
The questions above serve to also highlight
the challenge of standing health committees to
understand the linkages between other government
and donor efforts to address the broader issue of
equity, and assess the impacts of other programs in
the areas of infrastructure, poverty reduction, job
creation, community engagement and others. This
may entail coordinating actions with other standing
committees, as well as other Ministries.
`` Performance of Program or Policy
Implementation: Once policies or programs to
focus on child and maternal mortality are being
implemented, the standing committee has a role in
monitoring performance to achieve the intended
results. The performance of policy and programs
could include the following elements:
zz Clearly stated performance measures. From
the onset, programs and policies should have
clearly stated performance measures that
articulate what will be achieve over a set time
period. It should be clear to the standing
committee what the performance measures
are.
zz Frequent and effective monitoring. As
programs are implemented, they should
have a clear explanation of how they will be
monitored. There are a range of methods
for monitoring that can range from routine
supervisory visits to impact evaluation studies.
The standing committee should know how
the program is being monitored.
Approving and monitoring
budgets
One of the key responsibilities of a standing
committee is their role in approving and
monitoring budgets. The Parliamentary Rules
of Procedures define the specifics this role and
there are significant differences among the 25
priority countries regarding how committees may
participate in the budget process. For example, in
Afghanistan, once the Government submits the
annual budget, the budget for the health sector
is sent to the Standing Committee on Health of
the lower house (Wolesi Jirga) for the committee’s
review and comment. The committee’s comments
are aggregated into the Parliament’s consolidated
response to the Government. By contrast, in
Bangladesh, when the Government submits its
budget to Parliament, committees do not review
the budgets for the sectors within their portfolio.
Members of Parliament may provide their
individual feedback.
The ability for standing committees to monitor
budgets associated with child and maternal health is
complex. As Section 2 illustrated, there are multiple
causes of preventable deaths for both mothers and
children. For children, only malaria may have stand-
alone programs with dedicated budget lines that
makes budget monitoring relatively straightforward.
Budget allocations for other key causes of child
preventable deaths, such as diarrhea or pneumonia,
however, will be not have stand-alone budgets and will
be incorporated into general public health budgets.
The same is true for efforts to prevent maternal deaths
– there may be no dedicated budget lines to monitor.
Recognizing that there are differences between the
powers of standing committees and the key causes of
preventable deaths in the 25 EPCMD countries, the
following section details how the standing committee’s
engagement in different stages of budget formulation
and execution are relevant to EPCMD.
24. 14 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
`` Setting budget priorities: The earlier the Standing
Committee engages with the Ministry of Health
in the setting of budget priorities for child and
maternal health, the better. It is often observed
that, by the time the budget is presented by the
government to Parliament, it is too late to influence
government priorities.
A mid-term budget review can be an effective way
for the Committee to initiate discussion with the
Ministry on budget priorities. A mid-term budget
review entails the Standing Committee to hold
a hearing with the Ministry of Health to discuss
the progress in implementing the current year
budget and articulate the Committee’s priorities for
future year budgets. Such a review would allow the
Committee to ask questions of the Ministry such
as:
zz How are child and maternal health
investments reflected in the current year
budget? Are there specific programs, with
budgetary line items?
zz How effective has the Ministry been in
reducing preventable deaths? Has the Ministry
increased access or availability to care by
expanding key program coverage? Have
necessary health services seen an increase in
use?
zz How is the Ministry addressing each of the
multiple causes for maternal and child deaths?
zz What could the Ministry be doing differently
to be more effective in preventing maternal
and child deaths?
zz How will the Ministry prioritize child and
maternal health in next year’s budget?
The mid-term budget review is the opportunity
for the Committee to clearly articulate its interest
in child and maternal health and expectations for
an increase in priority for the coming year budget.
The presentation of specific rather than general
expectations is more effective. Specific expectations
might include:
zz Scale up of community health worker
programs to increase children’s access to life
saving treatment of pneumonia, diarrhea and
malaria.
zz Investment in ambulance services to transport
women to public health facilities.
zz Expansion of geographic coverage for bed net
distribution programs.
zz Investment in data collection and analysis for
targeting public health resources to the most
vulnerable.
When the budget is presented, the Committee can
assess whether this priority is reflected in the budget
for public health resources.
Where a mid-term review with the Ministry is not
possible, Standing Committees may also submit
documentation to the Ministry on its priorities for
the upcoming budget. The committee may also
hold a public hearing to present priorities to the
media, maternal and child health oriented-NGOs,
and advocacy groups.
`` Reviewing budgets: Once the budget is presented
to Parliament, it is important for the Committee to
assess the funding for resources critical for child and
maternal health. Where there are programs with
dedicated budget lines (i.e. malaria or HIV/AIDS)
this entails the Committee assessing:
zz Has funding risen, fallen or stayed the same?
A basic level of assessment is whether or not
funding is increasing. Understanding historical
trends is important for the Committee to
assess whether the budget reflects its priorities.
zz How is the program funded relative to other
health priorities? While allocations may
increase, it is important for the Committee to
assess these program funding levels relative to
other health programming.
25. 2. How Standing Committees Contribute to Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality 15
zz What are the assumptions on which the
budget allocations were made? Assumptions
for health funding levels may include issues
such as:
zz Coverage: programs may not cover the
entire country or population, but may
target specific areas or segments of the
population. The committee should know
these assumptions.
zz Donor investments: Donor funding for
priority health services may or may not
be reflected in the budget. It is important
for the committee to understand what
investments are being made domestically
and what is being funded by donors. If
there is low domestic investment in priority
programs, what are the assumptions of
donor support?
The challenge of monitoring budgets for child and
maternal health is that many of the public health
interventions to reduce preventable deaths are
not reflected in specific line items. This requires
that the Standing Committee review the entire
health budget through the lens of this issue. The
Committee should pay particular attention to:
zz Community Health Workers: Community
health worker programs have contributed to
the reduction in preventable deaths in several
countries. The committee can review the
budget to make sure that such programs are
expanded.
zz Primary health care: The ready access to
primary health care facilities is important for
reducing preventable deaths. The committee
should review the budget to assess primary
health care resources and availability relative
to more sophisticated health care. Urban rural
disparities in resource allocation (both human
and financial) also prevent equitable access.
zz Ambulance services: Services that enable
women to get to medical facilities to deliver
their babies has proven to reduce preventable
maternal and newborn deaths.
zz Family planning programs: Investments in
family planning can contribute to reducing
both maternal and child deaths.
Where Standing committees have the powers to
review budgets, this analysis can be provided by
committee staff, parliamentary budget offices
or by partnering with maternal and child health
oriented NGOs or think tanks. The results of this
analysis can inform the committee’s response to
the Government’s budget proposal. In countries
where standing committees do not have the formal
powers to review budgets, it may be still possible
to conduct the analysis and partner with NGOs to
highlight the needs for child and maternal health
funding priorities.
`` Monitoring budget implementation: Once the
budget is approved by Parliament, the Standing
Committee plays an important role in monitoring
how funds are being spent. In some countries, the
Ministry of Finance puts out regular reports on
budget execution, while in other countries it may
be necessary to request budget updates from the
Ministry of Health. Factors that the Committee
should consider in monitoring budget execution
include:
zz Efficiency. Monitoring budget performance
includes an assessment of how the level of
performance relates to the amount of funding
required. A large investment for low return
does not represent an efficient use of resources.
The standing committee should inquire about
the efficiency of program implementation.
zz Timely execution. The committee should
monitor how evenly funds are being spent. It
is often the case that spending levels are low in
the beginning of the year and then accelerate
in the latter half of the year. While this likely
relates to the entire public health sector, it
will necessarily impact health funding. The
committee can be asking why spending is slow
and where necessary, support the Ministry to
advocate with other government institutions
(Ministry of Finance, Treasury, Procurement
26. 16 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
bodies) for more even spending. The mid-
term budget review discussed above is another
method for engaging in dialogue with the
Ministry on budget execution.
zz Internal controls. The committee can monitor
the effectiveness of spending by promoting
strong internal controls within the public
health sector. The leakage of funds – whether
through mismanagement, inefficiencies or
corruption – reduce the resources available
for child and maternal health. To promote
internal controls, the committee can:
zz Inquire about Ministry systems and
structures to promote accountability. The
committee can ask: does the Ministry have
an internal audit function? Is it sufficiently
funded? What are the weaknesses the
Ministry is seeking to address?
zz Monitor government audits of the health
sector. The committee can ask: how is the
Ministry seeking to address audit findings?
How do the audit findings impact priority
services?
zz Total expenditures. The annual budget
allocation to health is often not fully
expended. Lower than expected budget
execution rates can result from several factors
that the Standing Committee can monitor.
These include:
zz Weak management and budget control.
Low expenditures can result from weak
management and oversight. The ability to
accurately estimate required funding levels
and implement health programs requires
capacities at the national, subnational and
facility level.
zz Funding delays. Delays in the transfer
of funds to the health sector – from the
Ministry of Finance or Treasury – can affect
spending levels. If funding is delayed, it can
be difficult to fully expend resources over a
shorter period of time.
zz Procurement delays. In some countries,
institutions outside the health sector
manage major procurements, for
equipment or pharmaceuticals. Delays
in procurements can affect the ability to
spend funds. The committee can inquire
about the causes of these delays and
help the Ministry to advocate for timely
procurements.
It is also important to monitor budget execution
within the budget lines. Are there areas where
expenditures exceeded budgets? Are there areas
where budgets exceeded expenditures? The
committee should ask the Ministry to explain these
discrepancies.
27. 2. How Standing Committees Contribute to Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality 17
28.
29. 3. Tools for Parliamentary Committee Oversigh 19
Oversight is a critical function of an effective
Parliament, and to be successful must be
deliberate, planned and well-executed. As with
many areas, the plenary is often too cumbersome
for undertaking the detailed plans and activities
involved in effective oversight, and so the main
actor in the oversight process is the committee.
Cross-cutting nature of health programming
oversight. However, it is important to realize that the
committee and its members are not alone, and these
are numerous groups inside and outside of Parliament
that have resources and expertise that can be accessed
by the committee. Parliamentary budget offices and
research departments often contain experts that can
be seconded to the committee for a period, especially
if committee support staff are not subject matter
experts in areas such as health policy and finance. Due
to the interlinked nature of child and maternal health
responses, other standing committees are a potential
resource to be consulted. Outside of Parliament, civil
society groups and community groups are a valuable
source of information and expertise and in most cases,
are eager to interact with Parliamentary committees
and its members.
Authority to conduct oversight
The authority to conduct oversight by parliament is
usually established at two levels: the Constitution will
speak to the ability of the Parliament as a whole to
oversee the plans and programs of the Executive, while
such documents as the Rules of Procedures will dictate
exactly how that oversight can take place. Together
these documents address such questions as:
`` Are Ministers and other senior members of the
Executive ratified by Parliament?
`` Can Parliament compel testimony from Ministers
and Ministerial officials?
`` Does the national budget need approval from
Parliament?
`` Does the Parliament have access to credible
information relating to government activities and
performance (departmental performance reports,
public accounts, etc.)?
`` To what extent can Parliament make changes to key
legislation, including the budget?
In many developing and post-conflict countries the
lack of clarity in Parliament’s authority, as well as
an incomplete understanding of these authorities by
various actors can lead to conflicts, with the Executive
claiming Parliament is exceeding its powers, and
Parliament feeling too constrained in their ability to
properly undertake its responsibilities. In this way,
oversight can be a defining issue in the balance of
power in the Executive-Legislative relationship.
Section 3: Tools for Parliamentary
Committee Oversigh
30. 20 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Tools for oversight by
committees
In most cases, oversight on a certain issue will be the
focus of a sectoral committee – such as health, or
natural resources – and budget committees. Oversight
on child and maternal health programs presents a
special challenge, as the Health Committee may be
best situated to lead the effort, but reducing child and
maternal mortality also encompasses investments in
infrastructure, sanitation, and other important areas,
and therefore other committees, dealing with rural
and urban development, for example, need also to be
involved.
Regardless of which committee is leading the effort in
child and maternal health oversight, there are various
tools of oversight including ministerial briefing sessions,
ministry budget analyses considering strategic plans
and annual reports, and public hearings. Common
tools for oversight at the Committee level include:
zz Ministerial Performance Reports
zz National Budget
zz Public Accounts
zz Committee Hearings
zz Public Hearings
zz Field / Site Visits
`` Ministerial Performance Reports. These reports
are prepared by Executive agencies on an annual
or semi-annual basis. These reports should include
annual progress of their sector or ministry strategy,
and implementation of laws and agreements
that were enacted or agreed upon. Given that
committees also engage in deliberation of bills, it is
important to plan and set aside sufficient time for
oversight activities to include detailed discussion
of annual reports. As these are usually required by
Parliament, they are tabled in plenary sessions and
can be the basis for questioning of Ministers and
debate in the plenary, during Question Period, and
within the committee’s regular agenda.
`` National Budgets: Budgetary oversight is one of
the core functions of the sectoral committees. The
budget law, authorized by Parliament, details how
much is allocated to each ministry and explains
the policy objectives that are to be achieved by
concerned ministries. Budget oversight is therefore
the key tool with which sectoral committees assess
government programs. For many committees and
individual members the challenge is to be able to
analyze and identify the specific commitments
within the budget document that relate to child
and maternal health. With any one issue this
can be difficult; often spending and investments
are presented in such a manner that sectoral and
geographic distribution of funding is almost
impossible to discern. With the multitude of
issues falling within the EPCMD framework, this
becomes even more troublesome.
As mentioned above, national budgets are
usually subjected to a simple up/down vote, and
therefore there is little possibility of fine-tuning
the document once it reaches committee stage.
Similarly, the window of time to study the budget
document is limited; should the committee have
multiple mandates (such as Health and Education)
the leadership will have to limit its scrutiny to
several specific sectors. To address both issues,
the committee should integrate its work into the
overall budget cycle and plan its interventions
at key points, such as the initial formulation of
Ministerial inputs into the budget or during the
pre-budget consultation process, should one exist.
In this manner the mid-year budget review also
becomes a valuable tool with which to oversee the
government’s commitments to child and maternal
health efforts.
The health sector employs several tools that tracing
funds throughout the health system to determine
where the funds originate and how funds are linked
to their intended outcomes. These resource tracking
tools – that are led by the government, often
with donor support – can provide the Standing
Committee with important information and data
to inform their oversight.
31. 3. Tools for Parliamentary Committee Oversigh 21
Table 2 below describes three of the major resource
tracking approaches and how they might be used by
the Standing Committee.
Methodology Key Features
Questions Methodology
Helps Answer
How Standing
Committees Can Use for
Health Oversight
National/
System of Health
Accounts (N/
SHA)
yy Used to determine a nation’s
health expenditure patterns
yy Describes the magnitude and
flow of funds through a health
system; uses expenditure as a
basis
yy Looks at overall health
expenditures, including
public, private, and donor
contributions
yy Provides standard set of tables
that organizes information in
an easy-to-understand manner
yy Who finances health care?
yy How much do they spend?
yy Where do their health
funds go?
yy How are the resources
pooled and managed?
yy Who benefits from
this health expenditure
pattern?
yy Differentiates between
country and donor
investments in health
programming, including
changing trends – key
to determining country
priorities
yy Details out-of-pocket
expenses that can be
a major obstacle for
maternal and child
health care
Public
Expenditure
Review
yy Analyzes public sector
spending against policy,
efficiency, effectiveness, equity,
and sustainability parameters
yy Focused on spending in social
sectors; not limited to health
yy Provides policy and finance
management information
yy How are budgetary
allocations and public
expenditures, as well as
services, distributed among
the population?
yy How efficient/effective is
the use of public spending
to achieve the desired
health outcomes?
yy Cross sectoral focus
aligns with the nature
of effective EPCMD
responses.
yy Highlights issues
of efficiency and
effectiveness that are
key to oversight.
yy Describes service
coverage
Public
Expenditure
Tracking Survey
yy Tracks the flow of resources
through the various layers of
government bureaucracy
yy Has diagnostic purpose – to
identify bottlenecks and
leakages
yy Where are the key
impediments of public
resource flows to the
service providers?
yy What is the magnitude of
these impediments?
yy Highlights inefficiencies
and obstacles to funding
key services.
yy Details leakage and
potential corruption
Table 2: Major Resource Tracking Approaches
`` Public Accounts. The budget and related
documents are important expressions of the
Executive’s intentions and policies; however it can be
argued that the Public Accounts – usually defined in
most jurisdictions as the consolidated statement of
actual expenditures during the most recently fiscal
year – are a much more valuable tool for oversight.
The Public Accounts can be a powerful reflection
of the ability of Ministries to carry out programs in
a cost-effective (and programmatically-effective)
manner. In many jurisdictions, the Public Accounts
have been used as a way of identifying delays in
project implementation, and cost overruns. The
Public Accounts can also show the geographic
distribution of health project funds, providing the
committee the ability to verify that regional needs
and priorities are matched with actual government
investments.
32. 22 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
`` Reports of the Supreme Audit Authority. In
most countries, a supreme audit authority exists,
independent from the government, and often
with a reporting mandate directly to Parliament.
These institutions will produce audits on
major government programs and expenditures,
either on a pre-determined, rolling basis or in
response to an expressed need or contingency.
Standing committees on health often use these
reports as the basis for further investigation and
oversight of a health issue, and often follow-up
on recommendations and findings to ensure
compliance and implementation.
`` Committee Hearings. In addition to written
reports by ministries, committees may ask
ministers and other government officials to explain
the reports and answer questions by members
of the committees. By obtaining clarifications
from government officials, committees are better
equipped to assess these activities. Oral exchanges
in committee rooms, which are broadcast by
television, enable members of Parliament to hold
government officials to account for their actions.
For these to be effective and credible, research
and preparation are needed; relevant data should
be gathered prior to calling ministry witnesses.
Almost equally important is the manner in which
these are conducted; committee hearings can set
the tone of the legislative-executive relationship,
and either build trust amongst the two branches of
government or diminish it.
`` Public Hearings. Members can supplement
information received from government officials
or reports with information from other sources.
Most parliaments invite experts from outside
government to provide knowledge and analysis.
They may also want to hear the opinion of those
citizens or citizens’ groups who are either positively
or negatively affected by a program. Parliamentary
Committees conduct hearings with public officials,
experts, interested parties, and the general public.
Committees conduct these hearings as a form of
consultation or a means of obtaining evidence.
`` Field/Site Visits. Committees or a group of
members from a committee can visit government
agencies and other sites to examine details of
specific administrative programs and their
implementation. Site visits should include physical
inspections, conversing with local citizens, and
assessing the impact of service delivery. Reports
should be developed for adoption by the whole
committee, which contains recommendations for
plenary meetings to consider. Field visits can be
an important symbol of the Parliament’s interest
in a certain issue but also in the case of efforts to
reduce child and maternal mortality, they can be a
powerful tool with which the Parliament connects
with stakeholders such as women in impoverished
areas, who would normally not have the means and
the voice to connect with lawmakers. These visits
can also serve to build the network of civil society
partners in the regions.
33. 3. Tools for Parliamentary Committee Oversigh 23
34.
35. 4. Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health 25
Section 4: Applying Oversight Tools to
Child and Maternal Health
The following offers options to Standing
Committees on how they might conduct
oversight over health efforts.
Step 1: Determine how the
government is addressing child
and maternal health
A first step in conducting oversight is to establish
how the government strategy for ending preventable
child and maternal deaths is articulated. To do so, the
following questions should be answered:
`` What is the scope of the problem? Figures X and
Y provide a high level assessment of the primary
causes of preventable child and maternal deaths
across the 25 priority countries. Additional
documentation10
is available to provide country
level detail. Asking the Ministry of Health to
articulate the problem, however, can be useful for
the Committee to check the degree to which public
health officials are collecting and analyzing timely
data on preventable deaths. Can they provide
updated information on vaccination coverage rates,
the number of assisted deliveries, the number who
sought care for fever within 24 hours of the onset
of fever, and other indicators. It can also be helpful
to ask the ministry where child and maternal deaths
are happening; the causes of those deaths; and what
segments of the population are most affected.
10
USAID. Acting on the Call: Ending Preventable Child and Maternal
Deaths. June 2016
`` What is the strategy? EPCMD countries are
working with donor organizations to develop
strategies112
to address preventable deaths. Each
donor may frame their strategy differently – it is
important that these donor strategies fit within a
national strategy. If there is no stand-alone strategy,
the committee can ask for an articulation of the
Ministry’s strategy for ending preventable child
and maternal deaths. Within this strategy it is
important for the committee to understand the
specific goals and targets of the strategy and the
metrics for measuring its performance. It is also
important for the committee to get the advice of
technical experts in order to understand the more
complex approaches to child and maternal health
such as emergency obstetric care, vaccinations, and
prevention of post-partum hemorrhaging etc.
`` What are the initiatives to reduce preventable
deaths? The committee should understand the
specific public health initiatives designed to address
preventable deaths. Some may fall under distinct
vertical programming (such as malaria and HIV/
AIDS), while others may be included in broader
public health efforts such as expanding access to
family planning or community health worker
programs.
11
Ibid
36. 26 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
More specifically, it is important for the Committee
to know the details on these initiatives:
a. Geographic/demographic focus: What are the
geographic or demographic targets of these
initiatives? How does the target relate to the
scope of the problem?
b. Performance targets: What does the Ministry
expect to achieve through these initiatives?
c. Cost: What levels of resources are being
directed towards child and maternal health?
Addressing the cross-cutting
nature of child and maternal
health impacts
As has been mentioned, there are many potential
factors that reduce child and maternal mortality
rates. Improvements in local roads and transportation
facilities will enable families to access better
healthcare; trade and agriculture policy will impact
food security and quality; environmental investments
could increase the quality and quantity of potable
water, etc.
Mapping Potential Government Investments
that Impact Child and Maternal Health
Trade Social Affairs
Agriculture
Water
Transport Urban Planning
Rural Affairs
Environment
Health
Impacts
Donor
Programs
At all Levels
of Government
National
Regional
Provincial
District
Community
Civil
Society
37. 4. Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health 27
The task for the Standing Committee on Health is to
be able to measure these efforts, and that requires a
concerted efforts to understand government efforts in
a wide variety of areas, and at all levels of government
– national, regional and local:
Committee leadership can establish several
mechanisms to ensure that the cross-cutting nature of
child and maternal health is recognized and measured.
These include:
`` Establishment of liaison staff with other standing
committees. Health committee leadership
can assign support staff to act as permanent or
temporary liaison to sectoral committees to ensure
that there is an awareness of current and planned
investments that may affect health outcomes.
`` Inclusion of sectoral committee observers
in Health committee sessions. Similar to the
establishment of liaison staff, the Chair can ensure
that members and staff of relevant committees are
present when the Health committee holds hearings
dealing with cross-cutting issues.
`` Calling Ministers and Ministry Officials to the
Health Committee. In most Parliament there are
no restrictions regarding the ability of a committee
to call government ministers and officials to
testify; for example, the Health committee has
the same power to call the Minister of Transport
to testify as the Transport committee does. To
adequate assess the government total investment
in child and maternal health, the committee may
feel it important to call on officials from all of the
ministries shown above – water, environment,
social affairs, etc. In these cases, it is important to
liaise with the other relevant committees, both as a
courtesy and as matter of practical coordination of
effort.
Step 2: Oversight planning
For committees to be effective in improving child
and maternal health outcomes it is imperative that
committee leadership create long-term oversight plans
that focus on one or more objectives that can be
measured and accomplished. Systematic planning of
oversight activities allows members and staff to be well
prepared and effective, to avoid planning on an ad hoc
basis, and most importantly, to allow for inclusion of
other stakeholders in the process, such as government
agencies, audit institutions, and independent
experts such as civil society organizations, university
professors, researchers, and technical/medical experts.
`` Drafting health oversight activities: A committee
oversight action plan of the working group may
include the following elements:
zz Designation of Responsibilities: The plan
might focus on oversight activities of the
committee as a whole, or establish a sub-
committee specifically focused on child
and maternal health. In order to manage its
workload more efficiently, committees usually
establish sub-committees or working groups to
handle certain issues. Working groups and or
sub-committees may be established to review
a draft law or oversee implementation of laws
or a government policy. Often committees
conduct more than one oversight activity,
therefore members are split in working groups.
The working group should be comprised of
diverse members, with the composition of the
working group/sub-committee is based largely
on the issue that is being overseen and the
background and interest of members.
zz Selection of Oversight Focus: Sections 2
presents three dimensions of oversight where
committees can engage: 1) oversight of policy
formulations; 2) policy implementation;
and 3) budgets. The oversight plan should
break out committee actions over these three
dimensions.
38. 28 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
zz Selection of Oversight Tools: Section 3
presents numerous oversight tools at a
committee’s disposal. As described, some of
these can include: 1) field visits to closely
observe the implementation of a law or
policy, or the functioning of an institution;
2) inviting government officials or heads of
independent institutions to report to the
committee or the working group; and,
3) conducting oversight hearings.
Given Parliament’s responsibility in the areas of
lawmaking, oversight, and representation, the
Chamber and the Committee need to strategically
plan their work for the year. This needs to happen
at the beginning of each year. Systematic planning
of oversight activities allows members and staff to
be well prepared and effective, to avoid planning
on an ad hoc basis, and most importantly, to allow
for inclusion of other stakeholders in the process,
such as government agencies, audit institutions, and
independent experts of civil society organizations.
The period of the oversight plan should be tied to
the overall parliament calendar, which typically has
four distinct phases:
October – December: Fall Budget Session
January – March: Winter Recess
April – June: Spring Legislative Session
July – September: Summer Recess
Although there are many variations on this
schedule, this is the most common pace of
parliamentary activity. Overlaid on this calendar are
the typical components of oversight plans:
zz Initial planning and prioritization
zz Budgetary oversight activities
zz Legislative oversight activities
zz Assessment of oversight plan and preparation
for upcoming year
The following section outlines an illustrative workplan
for how a Standing Committee might develop an
annual oversight plan focused on government efforts
to reduce child and maternal mortality. The Annex
provides a template for documenting the plan details
and monitoring implementation of the plan.
Activity 1: Planning and
Prioritization
Task 1.1: Initial Planning
Upon the return of the Parliament in Fall session,
the committee chair initiates the process of drafting
oversight plans by convening its members and
beginning the process of prioritizing the areas within
child and maternal health in which they are to focus
their efforts:
zz Is current data available relating to child and
maternal health?
zz What is the coverage area for access to care?
Are there significant gaps or areas where the
health system is not performing? ?
zz Within each, do the indicators show certain
key causes are dominant?
zz Has the government expressed its
commitments and priorities with respect to
child and maternal health?
zz Are there civil society groups active in areas
relevant to this issue? Is there a database of
active civil society stakeholders?
zz Who are the relevant Ministries that are
dealing with this issue?
Asking these questions will determine the priority
areas for the committee.
Task 1.2: Establishment of Sub-
committees (optional)
It is often efficient to establish sub-committees to
focus on various aspects of oversight; usually oversight
committees establish sub-committees to examine
issues from a budgetary perspective as well as from a
legislative/regulatory perspective.
39. 4. Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health 29
This may be appropriate in those parliaments where
there is a practice of working in sub-committees. It is
also possible to create and implement an oversight plan
as a whole committee.
Task 1.3: Coordination with
Committees and Parliamentary
Leadership
Once completed, the draft plan should be circulated
to the leadership of the Chamber, Secretariat and
other Committees. The plan needs to be discussed
and finalized by the Administration Board and Chairs
of the Committee. This is critical as inevitably the
task of overseeing programming to reduce child and
maternal mortality will involve more than just the
Health Committee, and will require the coordination
of several other committees. Likewise the oversight
plan will require resources from within the Secretariat
– such as the Parliamentary Budget Office, and Office
of legislative Research – and therefore integrating
them into the plan will be critical. Lastly, keeping
the Speaker and his staff informed will ensure that
permission to travel for field visits, and time in
the plenary to present and discuss findings will be
provided.
Activity 2: Budgetary Oversight
Task 2.1: Scrutiny of the National
Budget
2.1.1. Research and data collection/analysis.
Determine the existing available data on the priority
issue – i.e., can we determine past and current
investments in malaria eradication? Is there recent
resource tracking data available? If so, do we have
staff or access to outside experts who can analyze the
incoming budget to determine planned government
expenditures in malaria eradication?
2.2.1. Civil society interactions. Engage civil society
groups active in maternal and child health policy
development and health policy advocacy. Do they
have access to other data? Were they consulted by the
government during the process of budget formulation
at the ministry level?
It is important to recognize that grassroots
organizations outside the capital may have greater
access to data and a nuanced understanding of health
service provision.
2.2.2. MoH/MoF testimony. Supplemented with
data and outside advice, the committee can effectively
engage officials of relevant Ministries on the budget as
it relates to investments in EPCMD. It is important to
recognize that senior officials may have greater insight
into budget development and priorities, while those at
the subnational level (region, district) may have greater
understanding of how funds are actually spent.
2.2.3. Report on the National Budget. The output
of this activity will be a report, submitted to the
plenary, on their assessment of the national budget as
it pertains to, in this case, the eradication of malaria.
Included in this report would be the following:
Level of investment: does the proposed budget
represent an increase or a decrease in investment in the
eradication of malaria and other drivers of preventable
child and maternal death? What are the long-term
trends in this area?
Areas of focus: are the focal points of the investments
appropriate with respect to the key drivers of
preventable child and maternal death? Is the
geographical distribution of investment as portrayed
in the budget appropriate? Does the budget represent
accurately the government’s previous and current
national health commitments?
Task 2.2: Scrutiny of Public Accounts
2.2.1. Scrutiny of Public Accounts. As the Public
Accounts are released – usually at the end of the
government fiscal year – the committee will assign
staff and members to examine the spending on issues
related to child and maternal health. This may include
a review of findings from a malaria control program or
the purchase and distribution of medical equipment
for safe deliveries.
40. 30 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
2.2.2. Report on the Public Accounts. The
committee will develop a report on the government’s
investment in child and maternal health for the
previous year. These reports should highlight the
percentage of expenditures as compared to the
government stated commitment. Usually the Public
Accounts can highlight the completion rates of major
projects, which will lead to the identification of
existing and potential problem areas. Development
projects which are behind schedule or experiencing
cost over runs can then be designated as the focus of
greater scrutiny in the form of additional hearings and
field visits. The committee, in coordination with the
leadership of Parliament, will release the report to both
internal stakeholders as well as civil society and the
wider public.
Task 2.3: Scrutiny of Budget
Implementation and Government
Performance
2.3.1. Examination and Hearings on Ministerial
Performance Reports. As the Ministerial Performance
Reports are tabled, the committee will review them
and call Ministry officials to explain the progress of
various government programs related to child and
maternal health. The testimony will feed into the
planning of field visits and other activities at the local
level. The Committee can request that Ministerial
Performance Reports use of clear and consistent
metrics (see Step 4 below) for different key issues
to allow for more effective monitoring of program
performance.
2.3.2. Field Visits to Clinics and Health Center
in Districts. A delegation from the committee
will execute a series of field visits to the districts,
attempting to observe first-hand the progress – or
lack thereof – of government efforts as articulated
in the budget and ministerial performance reports.
Committee staff will liaise with both MoH and
district government officials prior to the visits, giving
them notice of the purpose and focus of the visits and
to assist in making the appropriate arrangements,
including security if required.
2.3.3. Town Hall Meetings in Communities with
High Maternal and Child Morbidity. As part of
the field visit, it will be important to hold town hall
meetings in relevant communities; not only will this
provide powerful and compelling testimony from
affected groups, it will send a strong signal that the
center is aware of, and responding to, the needs of the
local community and the quality of care being offered.
2.3.4. Report on Government Efforts. As with each
component of this plan, it is critical that a report is
developed that highlights the committee’s efforts at
scrutinizing the government’s efforts at implementing
its response to child and maternal health issues. In
accordance with the practices of many legislatures,
the committee chair will liaise first with the Speaker’s
office and the Secretariat to coordinate the release of
the report publicly.
Activity 3: Legislative Oversight
Efforts to undertake budgetary oversight on a specific
issue are dictated by several events throughout the
year, such as the tabling of the national budget and
the release of various performance reports. Legislative
oversight can be undertaken throughout the year,
and is not just contained within the Spring sessions,
even though these sessions are often referred to as the
legislative session.
Task 3.1: Assessment of Pending
Legislation
3.1.1. Meetings with Speaker’s Office/Secretariat.
The committee chair will meet with the Speaker’s
office and the Secretariat to determine the status of
any pending legislation that may affect the effort to
improve child and maternal health outcomes. This
could involve legislation that enables spending and
investment or changes in government processes and
practice.
41. 4. Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health 31
3.1.2. Meetings with MoH Officials. Following
the meetings with the Parliamentary leadership, the
committee will meet with MoH officials to confirm
the government’s legislative agenda as it relates to child
and maternal health, and recommend approaches
which will assist in the passage of required legislation
in this area.
3.1.3. Recommendations for Pending Legislation.
The committee will draft a short report for the
attention of the leadership of Parliament with
recommendations related to the passage of pending
legislation related to the eradication of malaria.
Task 3.2: Assessment of
Implementation of Legislation
3.2.1. Examination and Hearings on Ministerial
Performance Reports. As with the budgetary
oversight, the committee will examine the relevant
ministerial performance reports and hold hearings
to collect testimony on the issues within the report
– primarily dealing with the implementation of
legislation that has an impact on priority health issues.
3.2.2. Field Visits to Selected Sites. Field visits will
be conducted that support the initial findings of the
scrutiny of ministerial performance reports as they
relate to the implementation of legislation.
Activity 4: Annual Oversight
Report
Task 4.1: Development of Annual
Report.
At the end of the Spring session, the committee will
consolidate the year’s work and produce an annual
oversight report, highlighting the performance of the
government in committing to, and realizing progress
in, the fight to end preventable child and maternal
deaths.
Task 4.2: Presentation to Plenary.
The committee will table the annual report in the
plenary, which can then be the subject of debate, and
the focus of questioning Ministers and officials, and
during regular Question Period sessions. To promote
a spirit of collegiality, the report should be provided
to MoH prior to its public release to ensure that
senior officials have the ability to prepare appropriate
responses to the issues raised in the report. The report
will be reviewed by public health experts who have
been assisting the committee with complex technical
and medical oversight.
Task 4.3: Media Release and
Distribution to Stakeholders and
Public.
The release of the annual report should be coordinated
with the leadership of Parliament to ensure maximum
public impact. Committee staff will work with the
Public Relations office of the Secretariat and office
of the Speaker to produce media releases, press
conferences and other media products for distribution.
Members of the committee should be made available
for media appearances and be provided with speaking
points and summary of the report to ensure common
messaging throughout.
Parliamentary oversight activities are a good
opportunity to inform the public about the work of
the Parliament and the work of institutions in general.
Therefore, the Committee should respect the principle
of transparency and ensure openness towards the
media and the public. While citizens should be able
to see their Members voting and approving legislation,
the Parliament should also make sure the public is
informed about activities of Members ensuring proper
implementation of laws.
42. 32 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Step 3: Engaging partners
Engaging civil society organizations and independent
experts: Apart from an invitation to participate in
a public hearing, CSOs and independent public
health experts can be engaged in all stages of
oversight, and this is certainly applicable to this issue
area. In most jurisdictions there are CSOs, both
domestic and international, actively engaged in the
issues surrounding child and maternal health, and
therefore the working group, assisted by the support
staff, should as a priority ‘map out’ these CSOs and
outside experts at the early stages of the work-plan.
Inclusion of independent experts and civil society
organizations increases the credibility of findings
and recommendations revealed by the committee.
Also, civil society organizations work on the grass
root level and can better verify the status of laws or
implementation of health-related projects.
Step 4: Applying metrics for
child and maternal health
oversight
Ministries of Health, the World Health Organization,
USAID and USAID-implemented projects use
metrics designed to measure both maternal mortality
and child morbidity, access to services, coverage and
quality of care to measure EPCefforts to reduce child
and maternal portality. These metrics can be used
throughout the design and implementation of the
Committee’s oversight plan to:
zz Craft questions for MOH officials and civil
society during meetings and hearings;
zz Request data from MOH officials and CSOs;
zz Identify areas for possible investigation and
review of public accounts; and
zz Create routine reporting with MOH to
monitor progress of child and maternal health
programming.
As described in Section 2, data collection systems are
often weak resulting in limited information on the
causes of maternal and child health. The following are
examples of indicators Committees can use to monitor
the performance of government programming. It is
important to note that this information may not be
available because data is not being collected. Also,
many of these metrics derive from the WHO or
household surveys that are not updated regularly.
For example, the Demographic and Health Surveys
(DHS) is taken every five years. Whether or not
the information is available, as a part of the its
oversight mandate, the Committee can request it.
It is important for the Committee to know what
information, or lack of information, the Ministry is
using to make policy decisions.
Key metrics include both the causes of deaths as well
as the coverage of programs to improve maternal and
child health.
43. 4. Applying Oversight Tools to Child and Maternal Health 33
A. Maternal Mortality
Indicators
General Indicators:
yy Maternal mortality ratio
yy Maternal mortality rate
yy Proportion of maternal deaths among all deaths
of females of reproductive age
Hemorrhaging:
yy Percent of live births attended by skilled health
personnel
yy Population coverage of community health
worker programs
yy Percent of community health workers or staff
trained in the use of uterotonics
yy Blood storage availability
Sepsis:
yy Percent of live births attended by skilled health
personnel
yy Availability of screening tools for sepsis
detection
yy Access to sanitation and clean delivery sites
yy Postnatal care for mothers and babies within
two days of birth
Hypertension:
yy Percent of live births attended by skilled health
personnel
yy Availability of magnesium sulfate
yy Percent women aged 15-49 years attended by a
skilled health provider during pregnancy
B. Child Death Indicators
General Indicators:
yy Under-five child mortality, with the proportion
of newborn deaths
yy Stillbirth rate
yy Neonatal mortality rate per 1000 live births /
Infant Mortality Rate
Pneumonia:
yy Percent of children <5 with symptoms of
pneumonia taken to appropriate health
provider
yy Percentage of babies exclusively breastfed at 1
month and 6 months of age
Diarrhea:
yy Percent of children <5 with diarrhea treated
with oral rehydration salts
yy Percentage of households with hand-washing
materials in dwelling/yard/plot
Malaria:
yy Coverage of bednet/indoor residual spraying
program
yy Percentage of households with at least one
mosquito net
yy Percent children < 5 years sleeping under
insecticide-treated bed nets
Preterm Birth:
yy Number of newborns weighing less than
2,500 grams at birth
yy Percent of infants <6 months exclusively
breastfed
44.
45. 5. Country-level Efforts to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality 35
Section 5: Country-level Efforts to
Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
The following presents examples of how EPCMD
countries have been able to achieve success in
ending preventable child and maternal deaths.
Bangladesh
The Government of Bangladesh has pledged to end
preventable child deaths by scaling up interventions
proven to address preventable causes of child mortality,
with a special emphasis on newborn survival. The
health, nutrition, and population sector program of
Bangladesh has adopted a national strategy for maternal
health focusing on Emergency Obstetric Care (EmOC)
for reducing maternal mortality, early detection and
appropriate referral of complications, and improvement
of quality of care. Since 2001, the government has
embarked on program to retrain existing government
community health care workers as Community Skilled
Birth Attendants (CSBA) as the primary operational
strategy for achieving the 2015 target of 50% skilled
attendance at births. Bangladesh achieved a 5%
annual rate of reduction in maternal mortality since
1990 despite poverty and other challenges. Economic
growth, decreased fertility, increased use of facilities,
improved roads, and more focus on girls’ education has
all contributed to Bangladesh’s progress in decreasing
maternal mortality.
Ethiopia
Due to the government’s Health Extension Program
(HEP) modern method contraceptive use increased in
Ethiopia from 15% to 40% in the last 10 years, and
the total fertility rate declined from 6.4% to 4.8%.
The HEP is a network of 38,000 frontline health
workers stationed at 15,000 health posts throughout
the country, and 3 million volunteers (the Health
Development Army) who bring health information to
households. A recent survey found overall satisfaction
with HEP services to be over 60%, with family
planning services rated the highest.
46. 36 Guidelines for Parliamentary Standing Committees on Oversight of Programming to Reduce Child and Maternal Mortality
Kenya
The Government of Kenya has committed to
providing free maternity services throughout the
country, and in 2014 Kenya’s First Lady launched
the “Beyond Zero” campaign to mobilize additional
resources towards ending preventable child and
maternal deaths. Subsequently, mortality rates for
children under age five have dropped by 30% from
72 to 54 per 1,000 live births since 2009. Through
the Ministry of Health’s technical working groups
and various inter-agency meetings, key development
partners align their investments to reduce duplication
of efforts and increase efficient use of resources.
Those partners include: the UK Department for
International Development (DfID), the United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), and the United
Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). In addition,
Kenya has invested in high-impact, life-saving
interventions, such as use of insecticide-treated nets
(ITN) to protect children from malaria.
Malawi
Nearly a third of Malawi’s population lives in severe
poverty, but Malawi met its MDG 4 target as early as
2013 despite having the world’s highest recorded rate
of babies born prematurely. Malawi’s achievement of
MDG 4 was driven by its early adoption and effective
implementation of key evidence-based policies and
programs to address the major causes of child deaths.
Sharp increases in national coverage for treatment and
prevention of childhood pneumonia, diarrhea, and
malaria, and effective implementation of programs to
reduce child malnutrition, were key contributors to
the country’s success. Malawi prevented an estimated
280,000 child deaths between 2000 and 2013
through scale-up of these and other high-impact child
health interventions.
Nepal
Nepal’s 50,000 Female Community Health
Volunteers (FCHVs) have played an integral role
in improving RMNCH and nutrition intervention
coverage. FCHVs deliver services, engage communities
with the formal health system, and promote
healthy behaviors and practices in households and
communities. These strategies have helped reduce the
deaths of children under age five by more than 50%
in the last 15 years. For example, to prevent deaths
from umbilical cord infection, one of the major causes
of neonatal deaths in Nepal, FCHVs contribute to
increased application of chlorhexidine to the cord
during home visits immediately after birth. This life-
saving intervention has been scaled up to 49 of the 75
planned districts, reaching approximately 45 to 50%
of newborns.
Rwanda
Rwanda implemented a very effective public education
campaign on the importance of family planning,
antenatal care, and health center deliveries which
have been supported by a system of fines imposed
on women who fail to attend antenatal care and
deliver in health care centers. To combat the practice
of traditional birth attendants Rwanda integrated
them into village community health systems that
have allowed their practices to be replaced by skilled,
trained professionals. Rwanda also instituted a
community health insurance scheme that covers 90%
of the cost of ambulance transfers and has issued
CHWs with specially programmed mobile phones so
they can contact health facilities for referral. To make
accidental home births less likely Rwanda increased
availability of ‘waiting wards’ for expectant mothers
at rural Rwandan health centers thereby enabling the
swift diagnosis of complicated deliveries. As a result
of these initiatives, Rwanda has achieved MDG 5
due in part to a national health insurance that makes
maternity care affordable.