The Health Finance and Governance Project (HFG), funded by USAID, was asked by to work with Partners in Health and its sister organization in Haiti, Zanmi Lasante, (PIH/ZL) to conduct a costing study of the recently opened Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais (HUM). The objective of the study is to provide data and information that will support the development of a financial sustainability plan for HUM.
Analyzing the Technical Efficiency of Public Hospitals in NamibiaHFG Project
This document summarizes a study analyzing the technical efficiency of public hospitals in Namibia. The study collected cost and output data from 29 district hospitals and 5 referral hospitals for the 2014/15 financial year. It used Data Envelopment Analysis to calculate efficiency scores for each hospital and identify which were technically inefficient. The study found that 52% of hospitals were technically inefficient, meaning they could reduce inputs by an average of 19% without affecting outputs. Most hospitals also had scale inefficiencies, with the majority experiencing increasing returns to scale. The study estimates potential savings from addressing technical and scale inefficiencies, particularly through reallocating clinical staff and non-salary recurrent budgets. It concludes with recommendations to improve efficiency, such as realloc
Hôpital Sacré-Coeur de Milot Health Care Production Costing StudyHFG Project
y request of the Hôpital Sacré-Coeur de Milot (HSCM), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Mission in Haiti asked the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) Project to conduct a costing study of HSCM. The goal of this study is to supply the data and the information necessary for developing a financial viability plan for HSCM.
The primary goal of this analysis is to analyze the cost structure of HSCM to:
Enable preparation of informed budgets
Provide data for sound planning
Strengthen management systems
Devise a business plan that aligns with HSCM’s financing strategy vision and ensures the sustainability of the model of confessional private hospitals
Moreover, as part of its resources mobilization strategy the hospital wants to offer certain health services to a private clientele of patients. For that, HSCM wanted the detailed treatment cost of 10 diseases whose treatment it could offer private clients concurrently with current care offerings.
Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) Expenditure BangladeshHFG Project
This document analyzes reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health (RMNCH) expenditures in Bangladesh using data from the Bangladesh National Health Accounts. It estimates expenditures for 2012 by public and private healthcare providers and financing schemes. Key findings include reproductive healthcare expenditures of $134 million, maternal and newborn expenditures of $44 million, and child healthcare expenditures of $83 million. The analysis provides a breakdown of RMNCH spending by provider, function, and financing source to understand where resources are being allocated. It aims to inform policies to improve funding and access to critical maternal and child health services.
Unit Cost and Quality of Health Services in NamibiaHFG Project
This document analyzes the unit costs and quality of health services in Namibia. It finds that on average, outpatient unit costs are lowest in health centers and highest in private facilities. Inpatient unit costs are lowest in district hospitals and highest in intermediate hospitals. Quality of services is generally higher in private facilities compared to public facilities. The main drivers of costs include staffing levels, average length of stay for inpatients, and overall facility quality. The study provides recommendations to improve efficiency and quality of health services in Namibia.
Benchmarking Costs for Non-Clinical Services in Botswana’s Public HospitalsHFG Project
Authors: Peter Stegman, Elizabeth Ohadi, Heather Cogswell, Carlos Avila and Mompati Buzwani
Published: April 30, 2015
Botswana’s health sector has embarked on a broad program of reforms and, to this end, the Ministry of Health (MOH) has developed the Health Services Outsourcing Strategy and Programme 2011-2016. This planning document emerges from major strategic thrusts outlined in the National Development Plan 10 and the revised National Health Policy. Decision makers at the MOH, as well as hospital managers and others involved in implementing the outsourcing strategy at the facility level, need to know, among other things, how much the provision of non-clinical services is already costing the government under the existing arrangements. The study described here intended to support the implementation of the outsourcing plan by generating actual costs for the delivery of four non-clinical services that are, or will be, the focus of future outsourcing efforts: cleaning, laundry, catering, and grounds maintenance. The study looked at costs in five public sector hospitals: Athlone District Hospital, Deborah Retief Memorial Hospital, Gumare Primary Hospital, Goodhope Primary Hospital, and Mahalapye District Hospital.
An analysis of the costs and cost drivers of delivering non-clinical services in hospitals that are not currently outsourcing service delivery provides a cost benchmark. This will enable MOH decision makers and implementers to better understand the costs and cost drivers of non-clinical services and to compare current costs with estimated private sector costs, effectively negotiate contracts, and move toward greater efficiency and cost-savings. Further, cost benchmarks will provide hospitals with the critical data needed to understand not only the cost foundation of outsourced services but also more about what they can expect to receive for that cost, such as the type, quantity, and quality of service or product they are purchasing.
A Review of Health Financing in NamibiaHFG Project
This document reviews health financing in Namibia. It finds that while Namibia's GDP growth is expected to slow in the short term, limiting additional resources for health, GDP growth is projected to improve after 2017. Currently, Namibia relies heavily on indirect taxes and SACU revenues, though it aims to broaden its tax base. High unemployment and a large informal sector pose challenges. The government provides most health services, while the private sector is financed through medical aid funds. Overall, Namibia's fiscal capacity indicates potential to increase health spending in the medium term by expanding its domestic revenue and improving government efficiencies.
Income, expenditures, health facility utilization, and health insurance statu...HFG Project
The primary objective of this study is to estimate the average income and general expenditures of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA). The null hypothesis is that income among PLWHA is the same as that of the general population.
Additionally, this study will help to inform estimates of the potential liability faced by Vietnam’s Social Health Insurance scheme if it assumes responsibility for paying for HIV/AIDS treatment. VAAC is also seeking answers to questions about why patients are not enrolling in the insurance scheme and how to increase the enrollment rate.
Analyzing the Technical Efficiency of Public Hospitals in NamibiaHFG Project
This document summarizes a study analyzing the technical efficiency of public hospitals in Namibia. The study collected cost and output data from 29 district hospitals and 5 referral hospitals for the 2014/15 financial year. It used Data Envelopment Analysis to calculate efficiency scores for each hospital and identify which were technically inefficient. The study found that 52% of hospitals were technically inefficient, meaning they could reduce inputs by an average of 19% without affecting outputs. Most hospitals also had scale inefficiencies, with the majority experiencing increasing returns to scale. The study estimates potential savings from addressing technical and scale inefficiencies, particularly through reallocating clinical staff and non-salary recurrent budgets. It concludes with recommendations to improve efficiency, such as realloc
Hôpital Sacré-Coeur de Milot Health Care Production Costing StudyHFG Project
y request of the Hôpital Sacré-Coeur de Milot (HSCM), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Mission in Haiti asked the Health Finance and Governance (HFG) Project to conduct a costing study of HSCM. The goal of this study is to supply the data and the information necessary for developing a financial viability plan for HSCM.
The primary goal of this analysis is to analyze the cost structure of HSCM to:
Enable preparation of informed budgets
Provide data for sound planning
Strengthen management systems
Devise a business plan that aligns with HSCM’s financing strategy vision and ensures the sustainability of the model of confessional private hospitals
Moreover, as part of its resources mobilization strategy the hospital wants to offer certain health services to a private clientele of patients. For that, HSCM wanted the detailed treatment cost of 10 diseases whose treatment it could offer private clients concurrently with current care offerings.
Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) Expenditure BangladeshHFG Project
This document analyzes reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health (RMNCH) expenditures in Bangladesh using data from the Bangladesh National Health Accounts. It estimates expenditures for 2012 by public and private healthcare providers and financing schemes. Key findings include reproductive healthcare expenditures of $134 million, maternal and newborn expenditures of $44 million, and child healthcare expenditures of $83 million. The analysis provides a breakdown of RMNCH spending by provider, function, and financing source to understand where resources are being allocated. It aims to inform policies to improve funding and access to critical maternal and child health services.
Unit Cost and Quality of Health Services in NamibiaHFG Project
This document analyzes the unit costs and quality of health services in Namibia. It finds that on average, outpatient unit costs are lowest in health centers and highest in private facilities. Inpatient unit costs are lowest in district hospitals and highest in intermediate hospitals. Quality of services is generally higher in private facilities compared to public facilities. The main drivers of costs include staffing levels, average length of stay for inpatients, and overall facility quality. The study provides recommendations to improve efficiency and quality of health services in Namibia.
Benchmarking Costs for Non-Clinical Services in Botswana’s Public HospitalsHFG Project
Authors: Peter Stegman, Elizabeth Ohadi, Heather Cogswell, Carlos Avila and Mompati Buzwani
Published: April 30, 2015
Botswana’s health sector has embarked on a broad program of reforms and, to this end, the Ministry of Health (MOH) has developed the Health Services Outsourcing Strategy and Programme 2011-2016. This planning document emerges from major strategic thrusts outlined in the National Development Plan 10 and the revised National Health Policy. Decision makers at the MOH, as well as hospital managers and others involved in implementing the outsourcing strategy at the facility level, need to know, among other things, how much the provision of non-clinical services is already costing the government under the existing arrangements. The study described here intended to support the implementation of the outsourcing plan by generating actual costs for the delivery of four non-clinical services that are, or will be, the focus of future outsourcing efforts: cleaning, laundry, catering, and grounds maintenance. The study looked at costs in five public sector hospitals: Athlone District Hospital, Deborah Retief Memorial Hospital, Gumare Primary Hospital, Goodhope Primary Hospital, and Mahalapye District Hospital.
An analysis of the costs and cost drivers of delivering non-clinical services in hospitals that are not currently outsourcing service delivery provides a cost benchmark. This will enable MOH decision makers and implementers to better understand the costs and cost drivers of non-clinical services and to compare current costs with estimated private sector costs, effectively negotiate contracts, and move toward greater efficiency and cost-savings. Further, cost benchmarks will provide hospitals with the critical data needed to understand not only the cost foundation of outsourced services but also more about what they can expect to receive for that cost, such as the type, quantity, and quality of service or product they are purchasing.
A Review of Health Financing in NamibiaHFG Project
This document reviews health financing in Namibia. It finds that while Namibia's GDP growth is expected to slow in the short term, limiting additional resources for health, GDP growth is projected to improve after 2017. Currently, Namibia relies heavily on indirect taxes and SACU revenues, though it aims to broaden its tax base. High unemployment and a large informal sector pose challenges. The government provides most health services, while the private sector is financed through medical aid funds. Overall, Namibia's fiscal capacity indicates potential to increase health spending in the medium term by expanding its domestic revenue and improving government efficiencies.
Income, expenditures, health facility utilization, and health insurance statu...HFG Project
The primary objective of this study is to estimate the average income and general expenditures of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA). The null hypothesis is that income among PLWHA is the same as that of the general population.
Additionally, this study will help to inform estimates of the potential liability faced by Vietnam’s Social Health Insurance scheme if it assumes responsibility for paying for HIV/AIDS treatment. VAAC is also seeking answers to questions about why patients are not enrolling in the insurance scheme and how to increase the enrollment rate.
The Efficiency of the El Salvador HIV Program Mission SupportHFG Project
This document summarizes the findings of a survey conducted to identify inefficiencies in El Salvador's national HIV/AIDS program. The survey activities included interviews with health ministry technicians and officials. Key findings included:
- Opportunities for improved coordination between government agencies and civil society organizations involved in HIV prevention and treatment.
- A need to strengthen programs targeting at-risk populations like sex workers, transgender individuals, and men who have sex with men.
- Identifying ways to improve the efficient management and sustainability of program budgets given decreasing donor funding over time.
- Recommendations to update the national HIV law to help ensure long-term public funding for HIV programs.
Technical Brief: Strategic Purchasing Approaches for the Tuberculosis Hospita...HFG Project
This technical brief discusses strategic purchasing approaches for tuberculosis (TB) hospitals in Ukraine. Ukraine has one of the highest rates of multi-drug resistant TB in the world. Currently, most TB cases are treated as inpatients in TB hospitals, despite recommendations that most cases can be treated as outpatients. The Health Finance and Governance Project worked with partners in Ukraine to develop strategic purchasing systems for TB hospitals, including a cost accounting system, discharged patient system, hospital performance monitoring system, and simulation module. These systems provide data to support evidence-based decisions about optimizing the TB hospital system to improve outcomes and make more efficient use of resources. The systems have been implemented in pilot regions and will inform national rollout of new payment systems for TB
Year 4 Annual Performance Monitoring ReportHFG Project
The document provides an annual performance monitoring report for the Health Finance and Governance project from October 1, 2015 to September 30, 2016. It highlights the project's work expanding access to health care in developing countries by increasing domestic health resources, improving resource management, and strengthening health systems. It summarizes the project's activities in areas like global health security, HIV/AIDS, malaria, maternal and child health, and tuberculosis. It also outlines the project's field support activities in multiple countries and regions, including Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia, and Latin America and the Caribbean.
Year 3 Annual Performance Monitoring ReportHFG Project
This annual performance monitoring report summarizes the activities of the Health Finance and Governance Project from October 1, 2014 to September 30, 2015. The $209 million, 5-year project works with partner countries to expand access to health care by increasing domestic health resources, improving resource management, and making wise purchasing decisions. Key activities included supporting the development and implementation of national health financing strategies, strengthening health information systems, improving governance and oversight, and providing technical assistance to USAID country missions in over 20 countries worldwide.
KEBBI STATE, NIGERIA PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW 2013-2016HFG Project
This document provides a public expenditure review of health spending in Kebbi State, Nigeria from 2013 to 2016. It finds that while the state's health budget increased over this period, actual spending on health remained low and did not keep pace with budget allocations. The document makes several recommendations to improve health financing in Kebbi State, including increasing the prioritization of health in the state budget, promoting preventive care at primary health centers, and further evaluating the efficiency of the state health system.
The purpose of the USAID HFG TB Strategic Purchasing Activity is to identify and recommend small improvements in TB purchasing/provider payment and related public finance management (PFM) mechanism to better target country health budgets towards priority TB services for the poor in USAID TB priority countries. This technical report summarizes the rapid assessment findings, conclusions, recommendations, and possible next steps from stakeholder consultations held in Malawi from May 18-29.
The three health financing functions are revenue collection, pooling and purchasing. Revenue collection is the source/level of funds, pooling is the accumulation of prepaid revenues on behalf of a population and purchasing is the transfer of pooled funds to providers on behalf of a population. The main focus of the HFG/TB Activity is the health purchasing function, specifically provider payment systems and PFM mechanisms. This rapid assessment focuses more on domestic revenue health purchasing and PFM at the district level as other USAID investments are supporting NTP and Global Fund grant implementation. This assessment emphasizes public funding as public funding is critical to pro-poor priority public health services especially TB.
This rapid assessment is not intended to be a literature review or formal study. Stakeholder consultations are the main vehicle for identifying and recommending small TB purchasing and PFM improvement steps for possible further in-depth analysis and implementation. The rapid assessment technical report is organized into five sections: 1) introduction; 2) TB continuum of care gaps; 3) overall strategy and sequencing; 4) shorter-term TB purchasing and PFM steps; and 5) relationship between shorter-term steps and longer-term public service and health reforms.
Sustaining the HIV/AIDS Response in St. Lucia: Investment Case BriefHFG Project
The HIV prevalence in St. Lucia is estimated at 0.58%1 based on reports from public and private laboratories on clients tested. This estimate is very likely an understatement given that some who engage in risky behavior do not go for testing and others also choose to be tested outside the country for fear of breaches of confidentiality2. The epidemic is concentrated among the most at risk groups including men who have sex with men (MSM), commercial sex workers (CSW), and other groups including prisoners and drug users.
The HIV and AIDS response consists of prevention activities that have been mostly provided through non-governmental organizations and care and treatment provided mostly by the Ministry of Health (MoH). Prevention among most-at-risk populations (MARPS) was mainly provided by the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)-funded Eastern Caribbean Community Action Program (EC CAP II), implemented by the Caribbean HIV/AIDS Alliance (CHAA) whose program ended in September 2014.
ANALYZING FISCAL SPACE FOR HEALTH IN BENUE STATE, NIGERIAHFG Project
The document analyzes potential fiscal space for health in Benue State, Nigeria. It finds that Benue State could expand fiscal space for health through several approaches: leveraging conducive macroeconomic conditions like increased federal allocations; reprioritizing a greater share of the state budget to health; earmarking specific funding sources for health like the State Consolidated Revenue Fund; and attracting external grants. Overall, the analysis estimates that Benue State could generate between $6-12 million in additional annual funding for health through these strategies.
Tax Reform and Resource Mobilization for HealthHFG Project
This report examines whether improvements in tax revenue performance due to tax administration reform result in increases in available government funds that benefit the health sector and the conditions that facilitate greater allocations toward health spending.
Landscape of Prepaid Health Schemes in BangladeshHFG Project
This landscape study is part of a series of studies and analysis, undertaken by HFG on behalf of USAID/Bangladesh to determine the feasibility of NGO provider-based prepayment schemes. This paper describes, based on available documents, published and gray literature, and key informant and expert interviews, the landscape of prepaid health schemes in Bangladesh giving particular focus on provider based prepayment schemes. Bangladesh has extensive networks of NGO providers, some such as the Smiling Sun NGO networks have been supported through external funding. This paper reviews existing or recently completed prepaid schemes as a first step to determine the feasibility of provider-based prepaid schemes to increase the NGO providers’ sustainability.
Health Financing in Botswana: A Landscape AnalysisHFG Project
The government of Botswana is committed to achieving universal health coverage and assuming a higher share of HIV/AIDS and other health spending, even though long-term economic growth prospects are less optimistic than in the past. To guide its path, the government is developing a health financing strategy that will increase efficiency, ensure financial sustainability, and promote an effective mix of public and private mechanisms for health financing and service provision. The government created a multi-stakeholder Health Financing Technical Working Group (HFTWG) to lead the development of the strategy and requested support from the Health Finance and Government Project (HFG), a global initiative funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). HFG conducted this landscape analysis to inform the process by compiling the findings of previous studies, providing information on Botswana’s fiscal space for health, health expenditures, funding gap for health, and health system performance, and outlining policy initiatives for addressing the priorities of the HFTWG.
Este documento presenta los resultados de la prueba ENLACE 2013 en la Dirección Operativa N° 4 del Distrito Federal. Muestra que los niveles de logro en matemáticas incrementaron en los cuatro grados evaluados, con más estudiantes en los rangos de excelente y bueno. También incluye tablas con los puntajes generales de las 40 escuelas primarias de la D-4 con los mayores resultados, y una tabla comparativa de puntajes por asignatura en las zonas escolares. El objetivo es proveer elementos de análisis para la mejora continua
El documento describe los avances en la tecnología de teléfonos inteligentes y ropa inteligente. Detalla la evolución de los teléfonos móviles desde el primer modelo de Motorola en 1973 hasta los smartphones actuales con sistemas operativos como Android e iOS. También explica el desarrollo de prendas inteligentes que pueden monitorear signos vitales y mejorar el rendimiento deportivo.
Este documento describe la inauguración de un nuevo café y lounge llamado H&H en Pontevedra, España. Se promociona un fin de semana de apertura del 9 al 10 de octubre de 2009 con actividades como música, comida, fotografías y sorteos. Se ofrecerán descuentos del 50% en bebidas de marcas premium durante el evento de inauguración. El café y lounge ofrecerá wifi, reuniones, exhibiciones de diseñadores locales y otras comodidades en un ambiente moderno.
How to support womens land rights in mozambiqueFIAN Norge
The report discusses approaches to supporting women's land rights in Mozambique through four organizations supported by Norway: Norwegian People's Aid, FAO, CLUSA, and Forum Mulher. Their work aims to protect and promote equal land rights for women and men as recognized in Mozambique's constitution and 1997 Land Law. This law balances traditional, community land rights with equal rights for women and allows larger investments. However, increasing interest in land and resource pressure challenge women's rights. The organizations use different approaches like strengthening gender training for paralegals, advocating at national levels, formalizing individual land titles, and informing communities about land rights. Continued efforts are needed like disseminating knowledge about the law, prioritizing
El documento presenta las especificaciones para diseñar un sistema de información para una farmacia. Se requiere almacenar información sobre medicamentos como código, nombre, tipo, stock y ventas. También sobre laboratorios proveedores con datos de contacto. Los medicamentos se agrupan por familia según enfermedad. El sistema debe registrar ventas a clientes con o sin crédito y datos bancarios de estos últimos. Se solicita diseñar una base de datos con entidades como Farmacia, Laboratorio, Medicamento, Familia, Cliente y Ventas para gestion
El documento discute cómo los sistemas educativos cambiarán de aquí a 2030 debido a la revolución tecnológica. Se prevé que las clases magistrales desaparecerán y los profesores guiarán a los estudiantes en su aprendizaje personalizado e individual. El aprendizaje será de por vida y se valorarán más las habilidades prácticas que los conocimientos académicos. Además, internet será la principal fuente de conocimiento y el inglés se consolidará como el idioma dominante en la educación.
This document summarizes the products and services offered by a company to study oxidative stress at the cellular level. They provide fluorescent probes and assays to detect reactive oxygen species, apoptosis, autophagy and other markers of oxidative damage in live cells. They also offer a wide range of ELISA kits, antibodies and small molecules to modulate oxidative stress pathways and quantify protein and biochemical markers. The company aims to provide researchers with comprehensive tools to monitor the molecular origins and consequences of oxidative stress.
The Efficiency of the El Salvador HIV Program Mission SupportHFG Project
This document summarizes the findings of a survey conducted to identify inefficiencies in El Salvador's national HIV/AIDS program. The survey activities included interviews with health ministry technicians and officials. Key findings included:
- Opportunities for improved coordination between government agencies and civil society organizations involved in HIV prevention and treatment.
- A need to strengthen programs targeting at-risk populations like sex workers, transgender individuals, and men who have sex with men.
- Identifying ways to improve the efficient management and sustainability of program budgets given decreasing donor funding over time.
- Recommendations to update the national HIV law to help ensure long-term public funding for HIV programs.
Technical Brief: Strategic Purchasing Approaches for the Tuberculosis Hospita...HFG Project
This technical brief discusses strategic purchasing approaches for tuberculosis (TB) hospitals in Ukraine. Ukraine has one of the highest rates of multi-drug resistant TB in the world. Currently, most TB cases are treated as inpatients in TB hospitals, despite recommendations that most cases can be treated as outpatients. The Health Finance and Governance Project worked with partners in Ukraine to develop strategic purchasing systems for TB hospitals, including a cost accounting system, discharged patient system, hospital performance monitoring system, and simulation module. These systems provide data to support evidence-based decisions about optimizing the TB hospital system to improve outcomes and make more efficient use of resources. The systems have been implemented in pilot regions and will inform national rollout of new payment systems for TB
Year 4 Annual Performance Monitoring ReportHFG Project
The document provides an annual performance monitoring report for the Health Finance and Governance project from October 1, 2015 to September 30, 2016. It highlights the project's work expanding access to health care in developing countries by increasing domestic health resources, improving resource management, and strengthening health systems. It summarizes the project's activities in areas like global health security, HIV/AIDS, malaria, maternal and child health, and tuberculosis. It also outlines the project's field support activities in multiple countries and regions, including Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia, and Latin America and the Caribbean.
Year 3 Annual Performance Monitoring ReportHFG Project
This annual performance monitoring report summarizes the activities of the Health Finance and Governance Project from October 1, 2014 to September 30, 2015. The $209 million, 5-year project works with partner countries to expand access to health care by increasing domestic health resources, improving resource management, and making wise purchasing decisions. Key activities included supporting the development and implementation of national health financing strategies, strengthening health information systems, improving governance and oversight, and providing technical assistance to USAID country missions in over 20 countries worldwide.
KEBBI STATE, NIGERIA PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW 2013-2016HFG Project
This document provides a public expenditure review of health spending in Kebbi State, Nigeria from 2013 to 2016. It finds that while the state's health budget increased over this period, actual spending on health remained low and did not keep pace with budget allocations. The document makes several recommendations to improve health financing in Kebbi State, including increasing the prioritization of health in the state budget, promoting preventive care at primary health centers, and further evaluating the efficiency of the state health system.
The purpose of the USAID HFG TB Strategic Purchasing Activity is to identify and recommend small improvements in TB purchasing/provider payment and related public finance management (PFM) mechanism to better target country health budgets towards priority TB services for the poor in USAID TB priority countries. This technical report summarizes the rapid assessment findings, conclusions, recommendations, and possible next steps from stakeholder consultations held in Malawi from May 18-29.
The three health financing functions are revenue collection, pooling and purchasing. Revenue collection is the source/level of funds, pooling is the accumulation of prepaid revenues on behalf of a population and purchasing is the transfer of pooled funds to providers on behalf of a population. The main focus of the HFG/TB Activity is the health purchasing function, specifically provider payment systems and PFM mechanisms. This rapid assessment focuses more on domestic revenue health purchasing and PFM at the district level as other USAID investments are supporting NTP and Global Fund grant implementation. This assessment emphasizes public funding as public funding is critical to pro-poor priority public health services especially TB.
This rapid assessment is not intended to be a literature review or formal study. Stakeholder consultations are the main vehicle for identifying and recommending small TB purchasing and PFM improvement steps for possible further in-depth analysis and implementation. The rapid assessment technical report is organized into five sections: 1) introduction; 2) TB continuum of care gaps; 3) overall strategy and sequencing; 4) shorter-term TB purchasing and PFM steps; and 5) relationship between shorter-term steps and longer-term public service and health reforms.
Sustaining the HIV/AIDS Response in St. Lucia: Investment Case BriefHFG Project
The HIV prevalence in St. Lucia is estimated at 0.58%1 based on reports from public and private laboratories on clients tested. This estimate is very likely an understatement given that some who engage in risky behavior do not go for testing and others also choose to be tested outside the country for fear of breaches of confidentiality2. The epidemic is concentrated among the most at risk groups including men who have sex with men (MSM), commercial sex workers (CSW), and other groups including prisoners and drug users.
The HIV and AIDS response consists of prevention activities that have been mostly provided through non-governmental organizations and care and treatment provided mostly by the Ministry of Health (MoH). Prevention among most-at-risk populations (MARPS) was mainly provided by the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)-funded Eastern Caribbean Community Action Program (EC CAP II), implemented by the Caribbean HIV/AIDS Alliance (CHAA) whose program ended in September 2014.
ANALYZING FISCAL SPACE FOR HEALTH IN BENUE STATE, NIGERIAHFG Project
The document analyzes potential fiscal space for health in Benue State, Nigeria. It finds that Benue State could expand fiscal space for health through several approaches: leveraging conducive macroeconomic conditions like increased federal allocations; reprioritizing a greater share of the state budget to health; earmarking specific funding sources for health like the State Consolidated Revenue Fund; and attracting external grants. Overall, the analysis estimates that Benue State could generate between $6-12 million in additional annual funding for health through these strategies.
Tax Reform and Resource Mobilization for HealthHFG Project
This report examines whether improvements in tax revenue performance due to tax administration reform result in increases in available government funds that benefit the health sector and the conditions that facilitate greater allocations toward health spending.
Landscape of Prepaid Health Schemes in BangladeshHFG Project
This landscape study is part of a series of studies and analysis, undertaken by HFG on behalf of USAID/Bangladesh to determine the feasibility of NGO provider-based prepayment schemes. This paper describes, based on available documents, published and gray literature, and key informant and expert interviews, the landscape of prepaid health schemes in Bangladesh giving particular focus on provider based prepayment schemes. Bangladesh has extensive networks of NGO providers, some such as the Smiling Sun NGO networks have been supported through external funding. This paper reviews existing or recently completed prepaid schemes as a first step to determine the feasibility of provider-based prepaid schemes to increase the NGO providers’ sustainability.
Health Financing in Botswana: A Landscape AnalysisHFG Project
The government of Botswana is committed to achieving universal health coverage and assuming a higher share of HIV/AIDS and other health spending, even though long-term economic growth prospects are less optimistic than in the past. To guide its path, the government is developing a health financing strategy that will increase efficiency, ensure financial sustainability, and promote an effective mix of public and private mechanisms for health financing and service provision. The government created a multi-stakeholder Health Financing Technical Working Group (HFTWG) to lead the development of the strategy and requested support from the Health Finance and Government Project (HFG), a global initiative funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). HFG conducted this landscape analysis to inform the process by compiling the findings of previous studies, providing information on Botswana’s fiscal space for health, health expenditures, funding gap for health, and health system performance, and outlining policy initiatives for addressing the priorities of the HFTWG.
Este documento presenta los resultados de la prueba ENLACE 2013 en la Dirección Operativa N° 4 del Distrito Federal. Muestra que los niveles de logro en matemáticas incrementaron en los cuatro grados evaluados, con más estudiantes en los rangos de excelente y bueno. También incluye tablas con los puntajes generales de las 40 escuelas primarias de la D-4 con los mayores resultados, y una tabla comparativa de puntajes por asignatura en las zonas escolares. El objetivo es proveer elementos de análisis para la mejora continua
El documento describe los avances en la tecnología de teléfonos inteligentes y ropa inteligente. Detalla la evolución de los teléfonos móviles desde el primer modelo de Motorola en 1973 hasta los smartphones actuales con sistemas operativos como Android e iOS. También explica el desarrollo de prendas inteligentes que pueden monitorear signos vitales y mejorar el rendimiento deportivo.
Este documento describe la inauguración de un nuevo café y lounge llamado H&H en Pontevedra, España. Se promociona un fin de semana de apertura del 9 al 10 de octubre de 2009 con actividades como música, comida, fotografías y sorteos. Se ofrecerán descuentos del 50% en bebidas de marcas premium durante el evento de inauguración. El café y lounge ofrecerá wifi, reuniones, exhibiciones de diseñadores locales y otras comodidades en un ambiente moderno.
How to support womens land rights in mozambiqueFIAN Norge
The report discusses approaches to supporting women's land rights in Mozambique through four organizations supported by Norway: Norwegian People's Aid, FAO, CLUSA, and Forum Mulher. Their work aims to protect and promote equal land rights for women and men as recognized in Mozambique's constitution and 1997 Land Law. This law balances traditional, community land rights with equal rights for women and allows larger investments. However, increasing interest in land and resource pressure challenge women's rights. The organizations use different approaches like strengthening gender training for paralegals, advocating at national levels, formalizing individual land titles, and informing communities about land rights. Continued efforts are needed like disseminating knowledge about the law, prioritizing
El documento presenta las especificaciones para diseñar un sistema de información para una farmacia. Se requiere almacenar información sobre medicamentos como código, nombre, tipo, stock y ventas. También sobre laboratorios proveedores con datos de contacto. Los medicamentos se agrupan por familia según enfermedad. El sistema debe registrar ventas a clientes con o sin crédito y datos bancarios de estos últimos. Se solicita diseñar una base de datos con entidades como Farmacia, Laboratorio, Medicamento, Familia, Cliente y Ventas para gestion
El documento discute cómo los sistemas educativos cambiarán de aquí a 2030 debido a la revolución tecnológica. Se prevé que las clases magistrales desaparecerán y los profesores guiarán a los estudiantes en su aprendizaje personalizado e individual. El aprendizaje será de por vida y se valorarán más las habilidades prácticas que los conocimientos académicos. Además, internet será la principal fuente de conocimiento y el inglés se consolidará como el idioma dominante en la educación.
This document summarizes the products and services offered by a company to study oxidative stress at the cellular level. They provide fluorescent probes and assays to detect reactive oxygen species, apoptosis, autophagy and other markers of oxidative damage in live cells. They also offer a wide range of ELISA kits, antibodies and small molecules to modulate oxidative stress pathways and quantify protein and biochemical markers. The company aims to provide researchers with comprehensive tools to monitor the molecular origins and consequences of oxidative stress.
En las siguientes diapositivas encontraras algunos aspectos de los órganos de los sentidos tales como:
sus características, su funcionamiento, las partes por las cuales están constituidos y por ultimo la importancia de cada uno de ellos para los seres humanos.
Resumen:
La aplicación de ultrasonido terapéutico en emisión continua de 1,5 vatios / ctms a cada lado del cartílago tiroides, durante 2,5 minutos en la patología de la disfonía debido a nódulos vocales es eficaz y eficiente la solución de todos los nodulos en doce sesiones de ultrasonido terapéutico.
El documento argumenta que la vida no se mide por factores externos como con quién sales, tu fama, dinero o apariencia, sino por cómo tratas a los demás, la felicidad o tristeza que les causas, y si usas la vida para alimentar el corazón de otros de manera positiva o negativa. La vida depende de las decisiones que tomas y cómo afectan a los demás a través de tus acciones, palabras, juicios y trato hacia ellos.
The January 2011 issue of UPDATE Magazine from UNESCO-IHE provides updates on:
- An interview with the Vice President of Unilever about changing mentalities.
- A field report on the causes of floods in Pakistan.
- An agreement signed with 19 educational partners to strengthen global water education and research.
- Short news items on a variety of topics including a tracer survey of master's program graduates and 185 new students starting at UNESCO-IHE.
Autocuidado en adultos mayores argentinaseptiembre16
Este documento presenta una guía para el autocuidado de la salud de las personas mayores. La guía contiene información sobre cómo mantener un estilo de vida saludable a través de la actividad física, nutrición, sexualidad y sueño. También incluye consejos sobre la prevención y el cuidado de la visión, audición, piel, pies y cavidad bucal. Además, brinda recomendaciones sobre qué hacer ante situaciones como mareos, caídas, problemas de movilidad e incontinencia urinaria. El objetivo es promover
Murfatlar winery has won over 273 medals since 2002, including over half being gold medals, from prestigious international wine competitions. In 2010, Murfatlar launched its winery franchise concept to offer its products and services close to consumers. Franchisees provide the retail space while Murfatlar supplies the brand, products, promotions and training. To further stimulate sales in its franchises, Murfatlar created a point-based incentive program for selling its wine varieties. Edenred's Compliments gift cards provided an elegant solution for franchisees to redeem their earned points for cash rewards according to Murfatlar's scoring scheme.
El documento compara las opciones de desayuno de chocolate caliente y pan dulce versus la fórmula 1 cafe latte de Herbalife. El chocolate caliente y pan dulce tienen 542 calorías, 14.8 gramos de grasa y 55 gramos de azúcar, mientras que la fórmula 1 cafe latte tiene 170 calorías, 1.5 gramos de grasa y 21 gramos de azúcar. La fórmula 1 cafe latte también es más barata y fácil de preparar que el chocolate caliente y pan dulce.
Association between starting methadone maintenance therapy and changes in inc...HFG Project
The document describes a survey of over 1,000 methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) clients in Vietnam that assessed changes in their income and expenditures after starting MMT. The survey found that average annual income increased from around 16 million VND before starting MMT to around 22 million VND after starting. It also found reductions in catastrophic health expenditures and improvements in employment status associated with MMT.
Experiences in Outsourcing Nonclinical Services Among Public Hospitals in Bot...HFG Project
This report summarizes Botswana's experience outsourcing non-clinical services at public hospitals to private vendors. It provides context on Botswana's national privatization policy and timelines. It also describes capacity building workshops held for Ministry of Health and hospital staff on outsourcing best practices. Initial findings show that outsourcing represented a large portion of hospital budgets on average. Perceptions of service quality improved for cleaning, laundry, and security according to a staff survey. The use of service level agreements and improved contract management techniques led to better communication and oversight between hospitals and vendors. However, opportunities remain to strengthen governance and further empower women through outsourcing initiatives.
Measuring Technical Efficiency of the Provision of Antiretroviral Therapy Amo...HFG Project
Botswana has made great strides in combating the HIV epidemic. Deaths due to AIDS have declined dramatically since 2005 (UNAIDS 2014; 2016) and the country is on its way to achieving its 90-90-90 targets. As Botswana implements its ambitious Treat All Strategy and expands treatment to nearly 330,000 people living with HIV, the country will need to critically assess its efficient use of all available resources to sustain gains and continue progress towards an AIDS-free generation. To support the Ministry of Health with evidence regarding the efficiency of antiretroviral therapy (ART) service delivery, the USAID-funded Health Finance and Governance project estimated the overall and component-specific costs and utilization figures of adult outpatient ART care at Botswana’s public health facilities.
Synthesis of Data Collected From Health Facilities through Supportive Supervi...HFG Project
The Ethiopian government has introduced a wide range of health care financing (HCF) reforms aimed at increasing the availability of resources for health and thereby protecting the population from catastrophic spending at time of sickness. These reforms include allowing health facilities autonomy to establish facility governance structures, retain and use resources generated at the facility level to improve the quality of health services, improve protection of the poor through a fee waiver system, and provide certain exempted services that are in effect public goods. They also allow public hospitals to establish private wings and outsource non-clinical services. These reforms were first implemented in Amhara, Oromia, and Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples (SNNP) regions and then expanded to all other regions and the country’s two city administrations (Dire Dawa and Addis Ababa). Supportive supervision is used by HSFR/HFG to monitor the performance of health facilities in implementing these reforms; supervisors use a standard checklist developed under the project to review and offer feedback on facility progress.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The Funding Gap in the Dominican Republic’s National HIV/AIDS ResponseHFG Project
HFG conducted a gap analysis to calculate the increase in resources required to fully fund the National HIV and AIDS Response in the medium-term, including different investment scenarios. This report includes the methodology used, the estimate of funding gaps under different scenarios, and a section of analysis and conclusions that presents some alternatives to increase the efficiency of the distribution of resources to control the epidemic.
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.
Strategic Purchasing of Health Care Services in BotswanaHFG Project
The document discusses strategic purchasing of health care services in Botswana, noting that the majority of health funds are currently spent on secondary and tertiary care rather than primary care. It analyzes Botswana's health financing and expenditures, provider payment systems, and lessons that can be learned from international experience to reform primary health care financing through strategic purchasing. The recommendations aim to improve allocative efficiency and incentivize quality primary health care.
Understanding Client Preferences to Guide the Prioritization of Interventions...Md. Tarek Hossain
To summarize, the main findings were:
1. The availability of brand drugs is an important factor in determining which facilities are utilized in this population – more so than any other attribute explored in the study for child health services.
2. Provider attitude is also a key determinant of health facility choice and facilities would benefit from further exploration to define specifically how they can improve this client population's perception of their providers’ attitude.
3. This population, though generally poor, does not have a strong preference for free services (over moderately priced services).
4. Although this population expressed (as expected) strong preferences for a continuum of care that includes effective referral services, higher preference scores for provider attitudes and the availability of brand drugs were observed, suggesting that these should be considered for prioritization.
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.
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/
Sustaining the HIV/AIDS Response in Antigua and Barbuda: Investment Case BriefHFG Project
Antigua and Barbuda has made great strides in organizing its response to HIV and AIDS in recent years, and has managed to control the growth of the epidemic. The National AIDS Program (NAP) is now at a critical juncture as the country plans to adapt to the changing donor funding landscape, new clinical guidelines, strategic objectives, and changes in policy including greater program integration into primary care, which are designed to increase access and reduce the cost of service delivery.
This document provides analytic inputs that support a case for investment in the Antigua and Barbuda HIV and AIDS response. This report provides a quantitative analysis of trends in the HIV epidemic and the impact of various prevention and treatment efforts to date, along with a projection of possible future programming scenarios, their costs, and their implications for the epidemic. The report describes estimated funding available and gaps in funding that The Goals and Resource Needs models – part of the Spectrum/OneHealth modeling system that estimates the impact and costs of future prevention and treatment interventions – were used for this analysis.
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
Alternative approaches for sustaining the HIV and AIDS response in Dominican ...HFG Project
The purpose of this report is to capture and consolidate the suggestions of the Sustainability Group for consideration by the Government of Dominican Republic (GODR) and other relevant stakeholders. GODR will be able to draw from this report when developing its HIV sustainability strategy, revising the National Strategic Plan for HIV (PEN), and developing other planning and policy documents.
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.
Similar to Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais (HUM) Costing Study (20)
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.
OSUN STATE, NIGERIA FISCAL SPACE ANALYSIS FOR HEALTH SECTORHFG Project
This document analyzes fiscal space for health in Osun State, Nigeria. It examines options for increasing fiscal space such as prioritizing health spending, earmarking taxes for health, and improving efficiency. The analysis finds that covering the state's population under the Osun State Health Insurance Scheme at a premium of N7,660 per person annually would cost over N30 billion, exceeding currently available resources. Additional funding sources or subsidies for vulnerable groups would be required to achieve universal health coverage in Osun State.
ANALYZING FISCAL SPACE FOR HEALTH IN NASARAWA STATE, NIGERIAHFG Project
This document analyzes potential fiscal space for health in Nasarawa State, Nigeria. It identifies several options for increasing funding available for the health sector, including leveraging conducive macroeconomic conditions, increasing the priority of health in sectoral budget allocations, earmarking portions of taxes and fees for health, obtaining external grants, and improving efficiency. Collectively, these options could provide tens of millions of additional naira annually that could be directed towards expanding health coverage and services. The document recommends that Nasarawa State prioritize these funding avenues and implement reforms to fully capitalize on the fiscal space available.
PUBLIC FINANCIAL ASSESSMENT OF HIV SPENDING: NASARAWA STATE, NIGERIAHFG Project
This document assesses public financial management of HIV spending in Nasarawa State, Nigeria. It identifies several bottlenecks in the planning, budgeting, and budget execution processes. Bottlenecks include highly centralized decision making, lack of cohesive planning, and absence of evidence-based advocacy. It also notes differences in priorities between government officials and program managers. Recommendations include advocating for HIV program needs, preparing medium-term sector strategies, making budgets and revenue forecasts more realistic, and building capacity of HIV agencies to improve financial management processes.
Sectional dentures for microstomia patients.pptxSatvikaPrasad
Microstomia, characterized by an abnormally small oral aperture, presents significant challenges in prosthodontic treatment, including limited access for examination, difficulties in impression making, and challenges with prosthesis insertion and removal. To manage these issues, customized impression techniques using sectional trays and elastomeric materials are employed. Prostheses may be designed in segments or with flexible materials to facilitate handling. Minimally invasive procedures and the use of digital technologies can enhance patient comfort. Education and training for patients on prosthesis care and maintenance are crucial for compliance. Regular follow-up and a multidisciplinary approach, involving collaboration with other specialists, ensure comprehensive care and improved quality of life for microstomia patients.
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End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) is the level of carbon dioxide that is released at the end of an exhaled breath. ETCO2 levels reflect the adequacy with which carbon dioxide (CO2) is carried in the blood back to the lungs and exhaled.
Non-invasive methods for ETCO2 measurement include capnometry and capnography. Capnometry provides a numerical value for ETCO2. In contrast, capnography delivers a more comprehensive measurement that is displayed in both graphical (waveform) and numerical form.
Sidestream devices can monitor both intubated and non-intubated patients, while mainstream devices are most often limited to intubated patients.
This particular slides consist of- what is Pneumothorax,what are it's causes and it's effect on body, risk factors, symptoms,complications, diagnosis and role of physiotherapy in it.
This slide is very helpful for physiotherapy students and also for other medical and healthcare students.
Here is a summary of Pneumothorax:
Pneumothorax, also known as a collapsed lung, is a condition that occurs when air leaks into the space between the lung and chest wall. This air buildup puts pressure on the lung, preventing it from expanding fully when you breathe. A pneumothorax can cause a complete or partial collapse of the lung.
Mental Health and well-being Presentation. Exploring innovative approaches and strategies for enhancing mental well-being. Discover cutting-edge research, effective strategies, and practical methods for fostering mental well-being.
English Drug and Alcohol Commissioners June 2024.pptxMatSouthwell1
Presentation made by Mat Southwell to the Harm Reduction Working Group of the English Drug and Alcohol Commissioners. Discuss stimulants, OAMT, NSP coverage and community-led approach to DCRs. Focussing on active drug user perspectives and interests
Hypertension and it's role of physiotherapy in it.Vishal kr Thakur
This particular slides consist of- what is hypertension,what are it's causes and it's effect on body, risk factors, symptoms,complications, diagnosis and role of physiotherapy in it.
This slide is very helpful for physiotherapy students and also for other medical and healthcare students.
Here is summary of hypertension -
Hypertension, also known as high blood pressure, is a serious medical condition that occurs when blood pressure in the body's arteries is consistently too high. Blood pressure is the force of blood pushing against the walls of blood vessels as the heart pumps it. Hypertension can increase the risk of heart disease, brain disease, kidney disease, and premature death.
The Importance of Black Women Understanding the Chemicals in Their Personal C...bkling
Certain chemicals, such as phthalates and parabens, can disrupt the body's hormones and have significant effects on health. According to data, hormone-related health issues such as uterine fibroids, infertility, early puberty and more aggressive forms of breast and endometrial cancers disproportionately affect Black women. Our guest speaker, Jasmine A. McDonald, PhD, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at Columbia University in New York City, discusses the scientific reasons why Black women should pay attention to specific chemicals in their personal care products, like hair care, and ways to minimize their exposure.
As Mumbai's premier kidney transplant and donation center, L H Hiranandani Hospital Powai is not just a medical facility; it's a beacon of hope where cutting-edge science meets compassionate care, transforming lives and redefining the standards of kidney health in India.
Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais (HUM) Costing Study
1. April 2015
This publication was produced for review by the United States Agency for International Development.
It was prepared by Elaine Baruwa, Sophie Faye, Christian Yao and Waldo Beausejour for the Health Finance and
Governance Project.
HÔPITAL UNIVERSITAIRE DE MIREBALAIS
(HUM) COSTING STUDY
2. The Health Finance and Governance Project
USAID’s Health Finance and Governance (HFG) project will improve health in developing countries by expanding
people’s access to health care. Led by Abt Associates, the project team will work with partner countries to
increase their domestic resources for health, manage those precious resources more effectively, and make wise
purchasing decisions. As a result, this five-year, $209 million global project will increase the use of both primary
and priority health services, including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and reproductive health services. Designed
to fundamentally strengthen health systems, HFG will support countries as they navigate the economic transitions
needed to achieve universal health care.
DATE 2013
Cooperative Agreement No: AID-OAA-A-12-00080
Submitted to: Scott Stewart, AOR
Office of Health Systems
Bureau for Global Health
Recommended Citation: Baruwa Elaine, Faye Sophie, Yao Christian and Beausejour Waldo. April 2015.
Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais (HUM) Costing Study. Bethesda, MD: Health Finance & Governance Project, Abt
Associates Inc.
Abt Associates Inc. | 4550 Montgomery Avenue, Suite 800 North | Bethesda, Maryland 20814
T: 301.347.5000 | F: 301.652.3916 | www.abtassociates.com
Broad Branch Associates | Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI) | Futures Institute
| Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHSPH) | Results for Development Institute (R4D)
| RTI International | Training Resources Group, Inc. (TRG)
3. HÔPITAL UNIVERSITAIRE DE MIREBALAIS
(HUM) COSTING STUDY
DISCLAIMER
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. i
CONTENTS
Contents ...............................................................................................................i
Acronyms............................................................................................................iii
Acknowledgments...............................................................................................v
Executive Summary ..........................................................................................vii
1. Background ...........................................................................................1
1.1 Haiti .........................................................................................................................................1
1.2 HUM........................................................................................................................................1
2. Objectives..............................................................................................3
2.1 Objectives..............................................................................................................................3
2.2 Rationale.................................................................................................................................3
3. Methodology..........................................................................................5
4. Findings..................................................................................................7
4.1 Total costs.............................................................................................................................7
4.2 Key intermediate cost centers.......................................................................................11
4.3 Final medical services cost structure ...........................................................................12
4.4 Final medical services cost per output.........................................................................14
5. Discussion ............................................................................................17
Annex A: Total expenditures by line item.......................................................21
Annex B: Cost allocation process.....................................................................25
Annex C: Step down allocation assumptions...................................................27
Annex D: Step down allocation results............................................................29
List of Tables
Table 1: Hospital total costs for 2014 in US$................................................................................7
Table 2: Pharmaceutical and medical supply costs by cost center in US$ .............................9
Table 3: Equipment total value by cost center in US$...............................................................10
Table 4: Unit cost for intermediate cost centers........................................................................12
Table 6: Cost allocations by input for final medical cost centers, inpatients.......................14
Table 7: Outpatient unit costs by final cost centers...................................................................15
Table 8: Inpatient Unit costs by final cost centers......................................................................16
Table 9: Total expenditures provided for December 2013 in US$ .......................................23
Table 10: Step down allocation assumptions................................................................................27
Table 11: Administrative and Logistical Cost Allocation...........................................................30
Table 12: Intermediate Medical Services Cost Allocation ........................................................30
Table 13: Final Medical Services Cost Allocation........................................................................31
Table 14: Total Direct and Indirect Cost Allocation..................................................................31
Table 15: Administrative and logistical cost allocations to intermediate and final cost
centers.....................................................................................................................................................32
Table 16: Full costs by final medical cost center .........................................................................33
6. List of Figures
Figure 2: Cost allocation process.......................................................................................................6
Figure 3: Breakdown of total costs by Direct/Indirect................................................................8
Figure 4: Breakdown of direct costs.................................................................................................8
Figure 5: Breakdown of payroll costs ...............................................................................................9
Figure 6: Breakdown of costs for intermediate cost centers ..................................................11
Figure 7: Summary cost structure for inpatient and outpatient care...................................13
7. iii
ACRONYMS
GOH Government of Haiti
HUM Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais
MASH Management Accounting System for Hospitals
MSPP Ministère de la Santé Publique et de la Population (Ministry of Health)
OAVCT Office Assurance Véhicule Contre Tiers (Third Party Vehicle Insurance)
OFATMA Office d'Assurance Accidents du Travail, Maladie et Maternité (Worker’s
Compensation)
OR Operating Room
USAID United States Agency for International Development
8.
9. v
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank the busy administrative and clinical staff of the Hôpital Universitaire de
Mirebalais for their time and effort including but not limited to Gabou Mendy, Franciscka Lucien, Bryan
Mundy, Maxi Raymonville, Brittany Eddy and her team, and Militza Michel.
We would also like to thank Marie Jeanne Offosse, Ben Johns, Michele Abbott, Heather Cogswell, Yann
Derriennic and Stephen Musau of USAID’s Health Finance and Governance Project for their technical
review and overall support.
Finally we would like to acknowledge the support from USAID Haiti without which this work would not
have been possible.
10.
11. vii
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Health Finance and Governance Project (HFG), funded by the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID), was asked by USAID Haiti to work with Partners in Health and its
sister organization in Haiti, Zanmi Lasante, (PIH/ZL) to conduct a costing study of the recently opened
Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais (HUM). The objective of the study is to provide data and information
that will support the development of a financial sustainability plan for HUM.
Background
HUM was built by the combined efforts of the Ministry of Public Health and the Population (MSPP) and
PIH/ZL. Many donors contributed financially to the completion of this hospital complex, with a
combined investment estimated to be more than US$23 million. The newly opened hospital was
completed in response to an urgent request from the MSPP in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake,
which destroyed several key elements of Haiti’s infrastructure for basic health and education, such as
the Hospital of the National University of Haiti (HUEH) in Port au Prince.
Locating HUM in Mirebalais, in Haiti’s Central department,1 addresses an acute need in an area where
the population’s health status and access to care are poor. The hospital was intended to play a major
role in fulfilling the MSSP's strategic plan to ensure the decentralized offering of high-quality care in Haiti.
Therefore, its mission and structure differ from that of other hospitals: HUM provides primary care
to185, 000 inhabitants in Mirebalais, Savanette and Saut-d'Eau and secondary care to 451,000 inhabitants
from communes extending from most of Central Plateau, lower-Artibonite and upper-Ouest. Tertiary
care upon referral is offered to patients from a broader population of approximately 3.3 million
inhabitants, covering the entire center of Haiti including the suburbs of Port-au-Prince. Furthermore,
beyond an initial registration fee of 50 HTG2 (US$1.1), services are provided free. However, the reality
is that the post-earthquake level of funding available for health has peaked and the hospital needs to
understand its cost structure in order to increase the efficiency with which it uses its resources and in
order to design an effective strategy for financing the hospital in the long term.
Objectives and Rationale
The primary objective of this analysis is to analyze HUM’s cost structure and to estimate unit costs in
order to inform the development of the hospital’s budgeting, management, and planning systems; this is
critical as HUM moves strategically towards a long-term financing strategy aligned with national health
financing priorities to ensure the long-term viability of the HUM model in Haiti's public health sector.
1 One of Haiti’s’ 10 geo-political regions
2 1US$=42HTG
12. System Question Relevance to Sustainability
Budgeting
To what extent, financially, is the hospital’s
current cost structure fully accounted for in
its budget planning?
What specific areas of expenditures may
currently be off-budget and what level of
expenditure does this account for?
Having these cost structure data allows HUM
to increase the accuracy of its future budgets
to ensure that it has accurate estimates of its
future funding needs.
Management
How does resource use change over time; is
the facility realizing economies of scale as it
increases its level of service delivery?
How does resource use compare with other
facilities (where data are available)?
Do the current information systems provide
the data required to track efficiency?
Having accurately measured and consistently
tracked indicators of efficiency and the
systems to produce these measures is critical
for implementing sound management of the
resources available to the facility and
demonstrating this efficiency to funders.
Planning
Given their current cost structure and
recent service delivery levels, which
departments/services are anticipated to have
unit cost structures that may be appropriate
for cross-subsidization to support a revenue
generation strategy without posing access to
care barriers to its focal indigent population?
Having an understanding of cost structure
allows HUM to determine:
Revenue generation opportunities
Cross-subsidization opportunities
Having an understanding of cost structure
informs HUM’s response to increasingly
sophisticated health service purchasing
mechanisms like:
Results-based financing contracting
Health insurance schemes
Methodology
This study uses a tool for costing hospital services called the Management Accounting System for
Hospitals (MASH), developed by the USAID Partners for Health Reformplus project in 2004. MASH uses
a top-down approach for allocating costs, with the intent that all hospital costs should be assigned to the
departments (also called cost centers) that provide “final” services to patients, either as inpatients or
outpatients. A cost center is the smallest hospital unit that provides one kind of service, where costs are
accumulated or assigned. Through discussions with hospital staff and administrators, cost centers were
defined in a way that would be useful to managers and other final users and would reflect both how
departments are organized and how hospital data are stored. Overhead cost centers include all
administrative services and physical building costs. Intermediate cost centers include diagnostic services
as well as pharmacy and mortuary services. The final medical services cost centers include outpatient,
emergency, and inpatient services, by ward. These medical services serve as cost centers for purposes of
estimating unit costs that include the distributed overhead and intermediate services costs. The analysis
provides an estimate of the cost of an inpatient bed-day and the cost of an outpatient visit.
13. ix
Findings
Yearly operating costs at HUM were estimated to be US$15, 267,208 (Table ES-1). This includes the
value of all resources used, not just those included in the budget.
Table ES-1: Hospital Total Costs, 2014
All Costs US$ %
Labor costs $ 7,501,112 49.1%
Pharmaceuticals and medical
supplies
$ 1,691,797 11.1%
Depreciation of equipment $ 857,290 5.6%
Direct costs $ 10,050,198 65.8%
Indirect costs $ 5,217,010 34.2%
Total costs $ 15,267,208 100%
Approximately 66 percent of HUM’s expenses can be allocated directly to cost centers. This level of
direct costs provides confidence in the cost estimation for all hospital’s cost centers because fewer
costs (indirect costs) needed to be allocated. Labor accounts for about 49 percent of total costs,
pharmaceutical drugs and medical supplies for 11 percent and 6 percent are attributed to depreciation
of equipment. The relatively high proportion of costs accounted for by drugs medical supplies reveals
the use of sophisticated equipment at HUM that typically requires relatively sophisticated medical
supplies reflecting the integration of new technologies and innovations at HUM that align with its tertiary
health care service delivery objectives.
Labor
Labor is the major cost driver: wages and salaries were the largest proportion of total costs and this is
reflective of staffing models specific to tertiary care facilities where clinical specialists are direct
providers of health services to treat and diagnose common to complex illness. As a major cost driver
labor cost controls or efficiency measures targeted at personnel costs will be important to consider for
the future. However, the hospital management is limited in its ability to influence personnel costs at the
current time because the hospital is in an expansion phase; many positions are still being filled, including
some other specialist doctors; therefore, labor costs are likely to rise. PIH, Boston pays the salaries of a
few staff that are complement to the locally trained team in specialties where there’s an additional
capacity need. However, the hospital itself covers nearly 71 percent of payroll.
Pharmaceuticals and Medical Supplies
Pharmaceuticals and medical supplies account for a high proportion of direct costs (US$ $1,691,797),
reflecting the availability and use of sophisticated laboratory and diagnostic equipment as well as the high
throughput of the intermediate centers: pharmacy, operating room, radiology, and laboratory
departments.
14. Depreciation
HUM benefits from relatively new and highly sophisticated diagnostic equipment necessitating high
depreciation costs (US$ 2,093,757 per year). If total3 depreciation were excluded, the yearly operating
costs would be US$ $13,173,451.4
Indirect costs
A total of $5,217,010 of indirect costs per year is estimated as the cost of resources that are used
across cost centers. The largest of these costs are the depreciation of buildings, vehicles and energy
systems ($1,236,467). Energy is also a substantial indirect ($908,767). Other line items include office
supplies, other staff expenses, transport, communications and other functioning costs.
Key Intermediate Cost Centers
The availability and use of key intermediate medical services are critical to the high-quality care that
HUM aims to deliver. These centers have high costs and most have high throughput. The operating
rooms account for $1,424,491 a year; they conduct 2,998 surgeries at an average of $475 per procedure
and there is wide variation in the types of surgery performed. The laboratory at HUM is prolific with
330, 476 tests per year at approximately $2 per test, but there is wide variation in actual unit costs due
the wide range of tests conducted. Finally, the radiology unit accounts for $671,914 per year and
conducts 26,616 exams at an average cost of $25 per exam though specific unit costs vary, as unit
outputs range from basic X-rays to MRI scans.
Final Medical Service Cost Centers
Final medical service unit cost results should be interpreted with a lot of caution: their calculation is very
sensitive to hospital activity. Furthermore, while it is tempting to think of cost data as indicative of what
fee structures might look like, getting from cost to fee is a process that involves other critical variables
such as the projected and feasible service delivery growth, population demographics/epidemiology,
demand for services, policy priorities, equity, and revenue opportunities. That being said, the full cost,
outpatient visit numbers, and cost per output do indicate opportunities that should be explored further
as HUM carries out its strategic plan.
3 Total depreciation would include depreciation of medical equipment (direct cost, $857,290) as well as vehicles, building
and energy systems (indirect costs, $1,236,467)
4 HUM administration requested that the study team assume five years of useful life for medical equipment, which may be
overly conservative and certainly leads to high depreciation costs estimates.
15. xi
Table ES-2: Outpatient Unit Costs by Final Cost Centers
Final Cost Centers Full Cost Number of Outpatient
Visits
Cost per Outpatient
Visit
Outpatient General $1,321,275 78,007 $17
Outpatient Dental clinic $488,175 10,102 $48
Outpatient Community health $775,163 1,9955 $389
Outpatient women health $982,207 17,771 $55
Outpatient Pediatrics $263,032 12,115 $22
Outpatient Mental health $66,235 1,738 $38
Outpatient Oncology $867,227 6,553 $132
Rehabilitation/Physiotherapy $469,408 1,0336 $454
Accident & Emergency7 $2,041,063 14,629 $140
Labor and Delivery $1,410,267 3,0828 $458
Table ES-3: Inpatient Unit Costs by Final Cost Centers
Final Cost Centers Full Cost Number of
Inpatient
Days
Cost per
Inpatient Day
Bed
Occupancy
Rate
Average
Length of
Stay (days)
Inpatient pediatrics $ 879,608 10256 $86 75% 11.2
Inpatient medical ward $ 1,667,872 12368 $135 72% 27.4
Inpatient surgical ward $ 2,164,147 13972 $155 118% 16.6
Inpatient NICU $ 791,242 4219 $188 65% 11.0
Inpatient isolation ward $ 218,081 2787 $78 70% 30.0
Inpatient antepartum
ward $ 364,088 2636 $138 61% 7.4
Inpatient postpartum
ward $ 498,118 12010 $41 167% 8.5
5
This department do a lot of education work (81806 individuals counselled) and immunizations (27982 patients). In this unit cost we only
accounted for the 1995 nutritional visits that were done, hence the expensive unit cost
6
This is a new service that was built in 2014 and the activity is not yet important hence an expensive unit cost.
7
Emergency department did not have disaggregated data to distinguish between A&E inpatient and A&E outpatient, hence no data on
inpatient days.
8 This represent the number of deliveries both normal deliveries and C-sections.
16. Discussion
Based upon these findings, the following key recommendations are offered to support the hospital
administration’s efforts to move strategically toward being financially sustainable.
Budgeting
Accurate and realistic budgets that align with HUM’s mission and strategic plan are critical.
To what extent, financially, is the hospital’s current cost structure fully accounted for in its budget planning?
As this was the first complete year of HUM’s operation, budgets provided to the study team were
theoretical; for example, some line items were budgeted to be the same every month. Obviously, this
will not be the case in practice as generally speaking, one would expect health service utilization tends
to have some seasonality and therefore operating expenses would be expected to fluctuate from month
to month. As more HUM expenditure and service delivery data become available, it will be possible to
budget more accurately using the MASH.
What specific areas of expenditures may currently be off-budget and what level of expenditure does this account
for?
Pharmaceuticals and medical supplies are a major cost driver but full information on their unit costs was
not available at the time of data collection. The study team, in preparing the MASH template, has
identified nearly all of these unit costs so that in future HUM will be able to accurately account for this
resource use. Furthermore, HUM needs to distinguish between donated and purchased resources.
Donated resources should be fully accounted for so that accurate resource needs and utilization are
captured. Given HUM’s commitment to it its indigent population, fundraising will be a necessary part of
its financial strategy. Being able to accurately quantify what resources HUM needs will be helpful as it
approaches different donors who may have different priorities for funding or wish to make in-kind
contributions, for example, pharmaceuticals vs. equipment vs. fuel or other resources.
Depreciation/capital costs were also found to be a major cost driver. Budgets must account for these
costs to ensure that maintenance and replacement funding is set aside. If charging for sophisticated
radiological services is part of a revenue generation strategy, then maintaining and replacing the required
equipment is critical.
Management
Accurately measuring and consistently tracking efficiency indicators as well as having the systems to
produce these measures is critical for implementing sound management of the resources available to the
facility and demonstrating this to funders.
How does resource use change over time; is the facility realizing economies of scale as it increases its level of
service delivery?
All of the average unit costs presented in this analysis are subject to change because HUM is still going
through its initial start-up phase and service delivery levels and expenditures are yet to stabilize. Once
these variables have stabilized, HUM will need to go through a review phase to see how it might allocate
its resources more efficiently. This study’s modelling of its cost structure will assist HUM in this process.
This analysis includes the types of measures that, if monitored over time, can provide information on
where economies of scale are being realized because unit costs should be decreasing, at least in the
medium term. However, it is important to point out that the unit cost estimation should be further
refined to be more specific to the types of services (for example, the types of tests) as well as the types
of patients who receive services from a cost center that delivers services to both internal and external
patients. For example, it will be important to be able to differentiate between types and numbers of
17. xiii
laboratory services used by patients receiving medical care from HUM versus laboratory services used
by referral patients not seen by HUM clinical staff.
How does resource use compare with other facilities (where data are available)?
Currently, the study team is not aware of similar costs data being available for other tertiary-level
facilities in Haiti. This makes cost comparisons impossible. However, as noted previously, primary health
care services are an important output of HUM and these cost data for Haiti are available for
comparison. Such comparisons would probably be of interest to MSPP as it explores options for
providing primary care as efficiently as possible.
Primary care at HUM as a national referral and teaching hospital was integral to the phasing approach to
opening services at the hospital. HUM’s mandate included ensuring access to community-linked primary
care services for the currently underserved target catchment area for primary care services. During the
second phase of operations at HUM there will be a transition of primary care services to the former
CDI location, reinforcing an integrated system for primary care management and referral for secondary
and tertiary level care at HUM. Therefore in terms of cost comparison data, the transition of primary
care services to the CDI location and resulting costs of care would represent the most/a more accurate
measure for costs of primary services through HUM in the long term.
Do the current information systems provide the data required to track efficiency?
HUM has several sophisticated information management systems. Therefore, it should not be difficult for
it to ensure that the appropriate data are available in order to provide more specific unit cost estimates
for the future. For example:
For future revenue generation purposes, it will be important for systems to be able to
differentiate between indigent and non-indigent populations receiving care to ensure that
indigent populations remain able to access care free of charge and that this care is adequately
budgeted while non-indigents are charged appropriately. This distinction is key to effective
revenue generation policies that align with HUM's mission of commitment to its local
populations.
Several units within the hospital will need to be able to aggregate and disaggregate services more
accurately. Examples of this are L&D, where service delivery data are reported by the number
of uniquely identified patients rather than the number of services, the latter of which makes it
impossible to determine when a single patient uses the service more than once and the true
number of visits. Similarly, several inpatient units currently have occupancy rates of more than
100 percent because the utilization data are rounded up to whole bed days and don't capture
situations such as day surgery recovery, or others in which more than one patient occupies a
bed in one day.
The ability to accurately determine unit costs will become even more critical as financing strategies for
HUM are developed and revenue is collected from out-of-pocket fees, insurance companies, and
government contracting.
Planning
HUM recognizes the need to move toward a sustainable financial position.
Given their current cost structures and recent service delivery levels, which departments/services are anticipated
to have unit cost structures that may be appropriate for cross-subsidization to support a revenue generation
strategy without posing access to care barriers to its focal indigent population?
Revenue generation opportunities: This analysis identified some of the major opportunities for revenue
generation that HUM has at hand, including the use of its laboratory, operating room, and radiology
facilities. Given the cost of the equipment being used, it will be important for HUM to market these
facilities and use them to their maximum capacity. In addition, given that providing medical education is
18. part of its mission, these facilities might enable HUM to provide (tuition fee supported) education to
non-Haitian medical trainees from the Caribbean.
Cross-subsidization opportunities: Although HUM is still in its start-up phase, it already serves patients
from a wide variety of socioeconomic groups, so it is reasonable to plan for some cross-subsidization
between those who are able to pay for services and those who are unable to pay. Examples of services
in this group might be radiology, physiotherapy, and surgical services; their costs are too high to expect
indigent populations to pay out of pocket, but wealthier patients may want to take advantage of HUM's
sophisticated, high-quality facilities and can pay to do so. Similarly, low-cost services may be marked up
and priced to cross-subsidize more expensive services.
Results-based financing (RBF) contracting: Haiti is currently witnessing the implementation of at least
one RBF pilot scheme to support the provision of maternal and neonatal child health. Given HUM's
commitment to providing primary health care, it may be possible for the hospital to participate in the
RBF schemes. Understanding the resources required to provide the significant amount of primary health
care delivered by HUM would be important for setting contract prices (particularly if RBF payments are
lower than HUM costs.)
Formal health insurance schemes: Although private insurance coverage is very low in Haiti (1 percent9) it
is highest in the Port-au-Prince region geographically close to HUM. Therefore, understanding its cost
structure allows HUM to potentially contract with formal insurance schemes. These schemes include
the state-run Office d'Assurance Accidents du Travail; Maladie et Maternité (OFATMA), a provider of
worker’s compensation program; the Office Assurance Véhicule Contre Tiers (OAVCT), a state-run
provider of third party vehicle insurance; and private insurance companies.
HUM is an exciting opportunity to establish a level of quality care in Haiti comparable to that of much
wealthier countries for a population that has previously experienced insurmountable barriers to even
basic care. Ensuring that the facility has the resources it needs to continue to deliver this care is an
important responsibility that will require the involvement of many stakeholders. By understanding its
cost structure and being able to discuss its resource needs in evidence-based terms, the administration
of HUM will be able to clearly and accurately estimate and express these needs to the many potential
stakeholders who are increasingly seeking value for money for their contributions, and to take advantage
of the more sophisticated health financing contracting opportunities that are being explored by the
Government of Haiti.
9 Preliminary Living Standards Measurement Survey data, personal communication
19. 1
1. BACKGROUND
USAID’s Health Finance and Governance Project (HFG) was asked by USAID Haiti to work with Zanmi
Lasante/Partners in Health (ZL/PIH) to conduct a costing study of the recently opened Hôpital
Universitaire de Mirebalais.
1.1 Haiti
The Republic of Haiti occupies the western portion of the island of Hispaniola in the Caribbean with a
population of approximately 10 million people 44% of which are under 18 years of age. The Human
Development Index ranks Haiti at the 161st position placing10 it in the lowest fifth of that table and
reflecting its weak economy. Total Health Expenditure for the period 2011-2012 is estimated at 32.4
billion Haitian Gourdes (HTG) or US$771 million11. Health spending per capita over this period is
approximately US$75.9 which is above average for a low income country. However, the country’s health
expenditure is largely made up of foreign aid which accounted for 53% (bilateral and multilateral donors)
of total health expenditure over 2011-2012 and this poses future challenges for all levels of service
delivery but particularly the hospital level. Over the same period, total hospital expenditure was
estimated to be HTG 8.59 billion (US$200 million) but direct foreign transfers account for 76% of that
expenditure by source of revenue and government accounts for less than 4%.
1.2 HUM
The Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais (HUM) was built by the combined efforts of the Ministry of Public
Health and the Population (MSPP), and Partners in Health with its sister organization in Haiti, Zanmi
Lasante (PIH/ZL). Many donors contributed to the completion of this hospital complex, with an
estimated investment of over US $23 million. The locating of HUM in Mirebalais in the department
Central12 (about 50 Km from Port au Prince) addresses an acute need in area where the population’s
health status and access to care are poor. This project was completed in response to an urgent request
from the MSPP, in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake that destroyed several key elements of the
infrastructure for basic health and education, such as the Hospital of the National University of Haiti
(HUEH) in Port au Prince.
HUM provides primary care to185, 000 inhabitants in Mirebalais, Savanette and Saut-d'Eau and
secondary care to 451,000 inhabitants from communes extending from most of Central Plateau, lower-
Artibonite and upper-Ouest. Tertiary care referral is offered to patients from a broader population of
approximately 3.3 million inhabitants, covering the entire center of Haiti including the suburbs of Port-
au-Prince. HUM also delivers medical education to nurses, medical students as well resident physicians.
The hospital was built and equipped to meet the demands for quality care for all users, thus playing a
major role in the MSSP's strategic plan to assure the decentralized offering of high quality care in Haiti.
10
Human Development Report 2013, http://hdr.undp.org/en/2013-report
11
Haiti National Health Accounts, 2011/12, forthcoming.
12
One of Haiti’s’ 10 geo-political regions
20. As a result of its broad mission, the hospital is unique in that it provides basic primary health care
services as well as high end radiology, surgical and medical services such as MRI scans and oncology.
Furthermore, beyond an initial registration fee of 50HTG (US$1.10) services are provided free.
However, the reality is that post-earthquake swell of funding available for health has peaked and the
hospital needs to understand its cost structure in order to increase the efficiency with which it uses its
available resources as well as to design an effective strategy for financing the hospital in the long term.
21. 3
2. OBJECTIVES
2.1 Objectives
The primary objectives of the analysis are to estimate and analyze the cost structure of the newly
opened hospital with a view to informing budgeting, planning, and management efforts as the hospital
moves strategically towards a long-term financing strategy. This strategy should align with national health
financing priorities to ensure the long-term viability of the HUM model in Haiti's public health sector.
2.2 Rationale
A costing analysis can provide answers to specific questions within each of these three areas that are
related to long term sustainability.
System Question Relevance to Sustainability
Budgeting
To what extent, financially, is the hospital’s
current cost structure fully accounted for in
its budget planning?
What specific areas of expenditures may
currently be off-budget and what level of
expenditure does this account for?
Having these cost structure data allows HUM
to increase the accuracy of its future budgets
to ensure that it has accurate estimates of its
future funding needs.
Management
How does resource use change over time; is
the facility realizing economies of scale as it
increases its level of service delivery?
How does resource use compare with other
facilities (where data are available)?
Do the current information systems provide
the data required to track efficiency?
Having accurately measured and consistently
tracked indicators of efficiency and the
systems to produce these measures is critical
for implementing sound management of the
resources available to the facility and
demonstrating this efficiency to funders.
Planning
Given their current cost structure and
recent service delivery levels, which
departments/services are anticipated to have
unit cost structures that may be appropriate
for cross-subsidization to support a revenue
generation strategy without posing access to
care barriers to its focal indigent population?
Having an understanding of cost structure
allows HUM to determine:
Revenue generation opportunities
Cross-subsidization opportunities
Having an understanding of cost structure
informs HUM’s response to increasingly
sophisticated health service purchasing
mechanisms like:
Results-based financing contracting
Health insurance schemes
22.
23. 5
3. METHODOLOGY
This study uses a tool for costing hospital services called the Management Accounting System for
Hospitals (MASH) (Partners for Health Reformplus 2004). This tool uses a top-down approach for
allocating costs, with the intent that all hospital costs should end up in the departments (also called cost
centers) that ultimately provide “final” services to patients, either as inpatients or outpatients. The first
step in the MASH process is to define cost centers. A cost center is the smallest hospital unit that
provides one kind of service, where costs are accumulated or assigned. Through discussions with the
hospital staff and administrators, cost centers were defined in a way that was useful to managers and
other final users and reflected both how departments are currently organized as well as how hospital
data is stored, Figure 1. Hospital departments were classified into three types: “administrative and
logistics,” “intermediate medical services,” and “final medical services.”
Figure 1: Cost Centers utilized in the MASH set up for HUM
The method of allocating costs follows a “step-down” process, starting with the administrative and
logistical cost centers, then the intermediate cost centers. Figure describes the cost allocation process
utilized by the MASH. All line item costs were allocated using this four step process. A detailed
description of the relevant assumptions used can be found in Annex C.
24. Figure 2: Cost allocation process
Overhead services and physical building services are included in the administrative and logistical services.
Intermediate services include diagnostic services as well as pharmacy and mortuary services. The final
medical services include outpatient, emergency and inpatient services by ward. These final medical
services were used for purposes of estimating unit costs that include the distributed
administative/logistical and intermediate services costs. This analysis then provided an estimate of the
cost of an inpatient bed-day and the cost of an outpatient visit.
25. 7
4. FINDINGS
The findings from the MASH analysis are presented in four sections. In the first section, we look at total
costs and the line items that account for the largest proportions of those costs: Direct costs (labor,
pharmaceuticals and medical supplies, and equipment depreciation) and indirect costs. The second
section will look at the results of the key intermediate cost centers and their costs including pharmacy,
operating room, laboratory, radiology etc. The third section looks at the cost structure of the final
medical cost centers and the final section presents the unit cost per output for each final medical service
by inpatient and outpatient departments.
4.1 Total costs
For 2014, operating costs at HUM were US$15,267,208. This figure includes the value of all resources
used13, not just those included in the reported operating expenditure: depreciation of capital costs for
building and equipment are included in these costs as well as donated drugs and equipment. If we don’t
consider any depreciation costs14, the yearly operating costs of HUM drop to US$ 13,173,451. This
finding highlights the sophistication and newness of the facility. For example, HUM is renowned as being
one of the largest solar powered hospitals in the world.
Table 1: Hospital total costs for 2014 in US$
All Costs US$ %
Labor costs $ 7,501,112 49.1%
Pharmaceuticals and medical
supplies $ 1,691,797 11.1%
Depreciation of equipment $ 857,290 5.6%
Direct costs $ 10,050,198 65.8%
Indirect costs $ 5,217,010 34.2%
Total costs $ 15,267,208 100%
Approximately 66% of HUM’s expenses can be allocated directly to cost centers (Figure ). This level of
direct costs provides confidence in the cost estimation for all hospital’s cost centers because fewer
costs (indirect costs) needed to be allocated.
13
Except the value of medical staff who come to work as volunteer at the hospital throughout the year.
14
Total depreciation would include depreciation of medical equipment (direct cost, $ 857,290 ) as well as vehicles, building and energy systems
(indirect costs, $1,236,467)
26. Figure 3: Breakdown of total costs by Direct/Indirect
Figure , breaks down direct costs into the major cost categories, labor, pharmaceuticals/medical supplies
and depreciation of medical equipment. In Figure , we see that labor accounts for 75 percent of the
direct costs, pharmaceutical drugs/medical supplies 17 percent. The 8 percent accounted for by
depreciation refers to depreciation on medical equipment only. Each of these is discussed next in more
detail.
Figure 4: Breakdown of direct costs
4.1.1 Labor
Personnel wages and salaries were the largest proportion of the direct costs at about 75 percent
(approximately US$ 7,501,112 a year) and this is reflective of staffing models specific to tertiary care
facilities where clinical specialists are direct providers of health services to treat and diagnose common
to complex illness. As a major cost driver, labor cost controls or efficiency measures targeted at
personnel costs will be important to consider in the future. However, the hospital management is
limited in its ability to influence personnel costs at the current time and it should be noted that many
positions are still being filled, including some specialist doctors, because the hospital is still in an
66%
34%
Hospital costs distribution
(total $15,267,208 per year)
Direct costs
Indirect costs
75%
17%
8%
Direct costs distribution
(total $10,050,198 per year)
Labor costs
Drugs and medical
supplies
Depreciation of
equipment
27. 9
expansion phase. A few staff are paid for by Partners in Health in Boston that are complementary to the
locally trained team in specialties where additional capacity is needed. However, most of the payroll
(71%) is covered by the hospital, see Figure .
Figure 5: Breakdown of payroll costs
4.1.2 Pharmaceuticals/medical supplies
Pharmaceuticals and medical supplies account for US$ 1,691,797 per year. The relatively high proportion of costs
accounted for by drugs and medical supplies reflects the use of sophisticated equipment at HUM that typically
requires relatively sophisticated medical supplies. Aside from pharmacy, the operating rooms account for
11percent of cost, followed by dental clinic (10 percent), Laboratory (9 percent) and Accident & Emergency (7
percent). Pharmaceutical and medical supply costs are shown in detail in Table 2.
Table 2: Pharmaceutical and medical supply costs by cost center in US$
Cost center Drugs and medical supplies
Value in US$ % of total
Pharmacy 434,296 26%
Operating Room 184,618 11%
Outpatient Dental clinic 172,721 10%
Laboratory 151,330 9%
Accident & Emergency 117,464 7%
All other cost centers 631,368 37%
Total 1,691,797 100%
71%
14%
15%
Payroll distribution
(total $ 7,501,112 per year)
Hospital paid: local
personnel
Hospital paid: non
local personnel
Partners' paid
personnel
28. 4.1.3 Depreciation and Equipment costs
Capital costs represent the value of fixed assets used in the delivery of services. These are an important
component of hospital costing, particularly when the full cost of delivering services is required, for
example, for guidance in setting up user fees or to contract with insurance. Capital depreciation costs
are not trivial; they represent 8 percent of direct cost (medical equipment only) and 6 percent of total
costs.
The cost analysis for HUM does include capital costs; because the hospital opened recently it was
possible to obtain the value of fixed assets for the analysis. However, the hospital had not maintained a
register of all fixed assets nor are the values of the assets currently in use easily retrievable. An attempt
to estimate the cost of fixed assets proved time-consuming; it involved a team of data collectors taking
an inventory of equipment for every department and then the study team obtaining price estimates of
the costs of those items. The total value of that equipment was then used in order to calculate a yearly
depreciation amount that was added to the other direct costs, to arrive at a more accurate estimate of
the total costs of running the hospital. For the depreciation calculations we used a life time of 5 years15
for the equipment at the recommendation of the hospital.
A closer look at the inventory results in terms of total value of the equipment in Table 3 gives insights
on the costs centers with the most expensive medical equipment. The radiology department has by far
the highest proportion of the equipment value, as HUM is one of the few hospitals in the country having
a scanner. The operating room suite is also well equipped and denotes of the surgical potential of HUM.
The OB/GYN department also has a high amount of equipment as it is a referral hospital for OB/GYN
patients in the region.
Table 3: Equipment total value by cost center in US$
Cost Centers Equipment
value in US $ % of total
Radiology
1,249,396 29%
Operating Room
538,950 13%
Inpatient OBGYN (labor and delivery)
307,549 7%
All other cost enters
2,190,554 51%
Total
4,286,449 100%
4.1.4 Indirect costs
A total of $5,217,010 of indirect costs per year is estimated as the cost of resources that are used
across all cost centers. The largest of these costs are the depreciation of buildings, vehicles and energy
systems ($1,236,467). Energy is also a substantial indirect cost ($908,767) as well as Food ($640,920).
15
HUM administration requested that the study team assume five years of useful life for medical equipment, which may be overly
conservative and certainly leads to high depreciation costs estimates.
29. 11
Other line items include office supplies, other staff expenses, transport, communications and other
functioning costs (see annex A for more details on the line items).
Following the grouping of each department’s costs into direct (labor, drugs and supplies, equipment) and
indirect costs, the administrative and logistical services’ costs were then allocated between intermediate
and final medical cost centers. The resulting intermediate medical services’ costs were then allocated to
final medical costs center to obtain the final medical cost centers’ “Full costs”, see Annex B for details
on this process and Annexes D through E for the intermediary results.
4.2 Key intermediate cost centers
The step-down allocation of costs in the MASH tool does not directly report the final costs associated
with intermediate cost centers, which may be as important for hospital management to understand as
the breakdown for the final cost centers. To provide additional cost information, this section will focus
on the following most expensive intermediate cost centers: Pharmacy, Laboratory, Radiology and
Operating Room.
There are three types of costs that make up the total cost for each center: direct costs, indirect costs,
and allocated costs from logistical cost centers. For the intermediate cost centers, the direct costs
include labor, equipment and drugs and medical supplies. The indirect costs consist of utilities, and all
other related shared costs (for example stationary). Finally, the costs allocated from all of the logistical
and administrative cost centers are also included.
Figure demonstrates that these allocated costs are a significant part of the total cost for the
intermediate medical cost centers. For pharmacy and laboratory they account for respectively 15 and 24
percent of the total cost while for radiology it is 33 percent and for the OR suite it is 26 percent.
Figure 6: Breakdown of costs for intermediate cost centers
$-
$200,000
$400,000
$600,000
$800,000
$1,000,000
$1,200,000
$1,400,000
$1,600,000
Pharmacy Laboratory Radiology Operating
Room
Intermediate centers'cost breakdown
Total allocated froms logistics
Indirect costs
Equipment
Drugs & supplies
Labor
30. The hospital management might also be interested in the unit cost of output for the intermediate
medical cost centers. Using the activity reported by the hospital, those unit costs are shown in
Table 5. Particular care needs to be taken when interpreting these unit costs, depending on the nature
of the cost center: single output versus multiple outputs.
Ultrasound, mortuary and blood bank outputs can be considered as homogenous units and as such the
costs below are the real unit costs. However, laboratory, radiology, operating room and physiotherapy
departments each produce a range of heterogeneous outputs where each output has a different level of
resource consumption. For example, the laboratory performs different types of test that require
different equipment, reagents or amounts of staff time: an HIV test is different from a biopsy testing for
cancer. The radiology department does both X-rays and MRI scanning each of which are very different
in terms of cost of the required equipment and materials used. Similarly the time spent on different
surgeries carried out in the OR is different; so is the type of staff time and medical supplies used for
them. For physiotherapy, different patients need different number of/or longer sessions depending on
their condition. Therefore, because of these considerations, the unit costs for laboratory, radiology,
operating room and physiotherapy should be interpreted as being ‘the average cost of a unit of output
from these cost centers’ and not ‘the average cost of any one service’.
Table 4: Unit cost for intermediate cost centers
Intermediate Medical
Services
Cost after logistical
services allocation
Volume of services Average Unit Cost
Per day of conservation
Morgue $ 39,199 4,126 $ 10
Per test
Laboratory $ 647,003 330,476 $ 2
Per exam
Radiology $ 671,914 26,616 $ 25
Per unit of blood
Blood Bank $ 171,017 1,783 $ 96
Per surgery
Operating Room $ 1,424,491 2,998 $ 475
4.3 Final medical services cost structure
This section presents the cost structure of the final medical services. For HUM we found that outpatient
care accounts for 34 percent or just over a third of total hospital costs. Typically that figure is close to a
quarter or a fifth. However this finding reflects the mission of HUM which includes the delivery of
31. 13
primary health care to its indigent local population. Figure shows the cost of inpatient and outpatient
care broken into major inputs, salaries and drugs/supplies. For both outpatient and inpatient cost
centers, salaries and drugs/medical supplies make up the majority of allocated costs at around 60
percent.
Figure 7: Summary cost structure for inpatient and outpatient care
Table 5 (outpatient units) and Table 6 (inpatient units) show the cost structure in more detail. General
outpatient care was the largest cost center followed by Women health and Oncology. The outpatient
Physiotherapy/Rehabilitation reported the highest proportion spent on salaries with 67 percent which
can be explained by the fact that very little drugs and supplies were reported for this cost center.
Table 5: Cost allocations by input for final medical cost centers, outpatients
Final Cost centers Full cost Salaries % Drugs and
supplies
% Other %
Outpatient General $1,321,275 $573,971 43% $197,013 15% $550,291 42%
Outpatient Dental clinic $488,175 $94,024 19% $256,698 53% $137,452 28%
Outpatient Community health $775,163 $496,525 64% $4,087 1% $274,552 35%
Outpatient women health $982,207 $533,521 54% $127,904 13% $320,782 33%
Outpatient Pediatrics $263,032 $124,603 47% $14,487 6% $123,942 47%
Outpatient Mental health $66,235 $25,933 39% $163 0% $40,138 61%
salaries ,
49%
Drugs&su
pplies,
14%
Others ,
37%
Outpatients cost allocation by input
salaries ,
49%
Drugs&su
pplies, 9%
Others ,
42%
Inpatients cost allocation by input
32. Outpatient Oncology $867,227 $379,907 44% $163,554 19% $323,766 37%
Physiotherapy/rehabilitation $469,408 $315,717 67% $4,719 1% $148,971 32%
Total $5,232,722
Surgery, A&E, medicine and L&D were the largest departments in terms of costs amongst the inpatient
units and each of them is larger, in terms of cost, than any of the outpatient units. All inpatients services
have a higher proportion spent on salaries than on drugs and this difference in cost structure is typical
for inpatient units.
Table 6: Cost allocations by input for final medical cost centers, inpatients
Final Cost centers Full cost Salaries % Drugs
and
supplies
% Other %
Accident & Emergency $2,041,063 $1,036,809 51% $238,199 12% $766,056 38%
Labor and Delivery $1,410,267 $636,241 45% $141,982 10% $632,043 45%
Inpatient Pediatrics $879,608 $416,816 47% $55,308 6% $407,483 46%
Inpatient Medical Ward $1,667,872 $829,660 50% $153,312 9% $684,900 41%
Inpatient Surgical Ward $2,164,147 $1,232,650 57% $139,692 6% $791,805 37%
Inpatient NICU $791,242 $378,947 48% $86,565 11% $325,730 41%
Inpatient Isolation ward $218,081 $65,140 30% $22,462 10% $130,478 60%
Inpatient Prenatal ward $364,088 $153,577 42% $32,172 9% $178,339 49%
Inpatient Postnatal ward $498,118 $207,070 42% $53,478 11% $237,570 48%
Total $10,034,486
4.4 Final medical services cost per output
The last step in the cost structure analysis is to use the cost estimate data in combination with service
utilization data to give average costs per output for each unit. The activity data was provided by the
hospital: number of outpatient visits, number of admissions and number of inpatient days. The data on
the number of beds was extracted from the equipment inventory data and from documents provided by
the hospital. The bed occupancy rate were calculated by multiplying the total number of beds per ward
by 360 to get the total possible inpatient days per year; then the number of reported inpatient days was
divided by the number of possible inpatient days. The average length of stay per ward was calculated as
the ratio of number of inpatient days over number of admissions.
33. 15
These unit cost results should be interpreted with a lot of caution: their calculation is very sensitive to hospital
activity. Furthermore, for some cost centers it is very difficult to separate the different services provided.
Whenever different services uses different amounts of resources from the same cost center, simply
dividing the total cost by the number of units will give inaccurate unit cost estimates. For example the
outpatient oncology’s number of outpatient visits includes patients who came for follow-up visits and
those who came for a chemotherapy session. Unless more detailed data are made available on the
consumption of resource for each type of service (visit vs. chemotherapy) it is not possible to provide a
more accurate determination of how much of the total cost of the oncology department can be
allocated to visits versus chemotherapy sessions and therefore what the corresponding unit cost for
each type of service may be.
Table 7 shows the cost per outpatient visit across the outpatient units. The general outpatient unit
follows a typical primary care high volume, low cost pattern (although from a sound research
perspective it would be necessary to compare this with costs from a primary care center to determine
whether it is accurate to refer to $17 per visit as being low.)
Table 7: Outpatient unit costs by final cost centers
Final cost centers Full cost Number of visits Cost per visit
Outpatient General $1,321,275 78,007 $17
Outpatient Dental clinic $488,175 10,102 $48
Outpatient Community
health
$775,163 1,99516 $389
Outpatient women health $982,207 17,771 $55
Outpatient Pediatrics $263,032 12,115 $22
Outpatient Mental health $66,235 1,738 $38
Outpatient Oncology $867,227 6,553 $132
Rehabilitation/Physiotherapy $469,408 1,03317 $454
Accident & Emergency $2,041,063 14,629 $140
Labor and Delivery $1,410,267 3,08218 $458
The Accident and Emergency department is currently not collecting data that allow for any distinction to
be made between patients kept for observation and those who are discharged immediately after
treatment. However this unit does ‘admit’ some patients for observation and have approximately 30
beds that may be used. The activity found in table 7 is then a mix of patients kept for observation (1 or
2 days) and those discharged immediately.
Table 8 presents the average output costs for inpatient care. We see several units with bed occupancy
rates above 100% because the available data are not yet disaggregated enough to allow us to
16
This department do a lot of education work (81806 individuals counselled) and immunizations (27982 patients). In this unit cost we
only accounted for the 1995 nutritional visits that were done, hence the expensive unit cost
17
This is a new service that was built in 2014 and the activity is not yet important hence an expensive unit cost.
18 This represent the number of deliveries both normal deliveries and C-sections.
34. differentiate between beds that two different patients have occupied on the same day. For example, post
day-surgery patients may use surgical ward beds for recovery and be discharged. If this happens twice in
one day for a single bed then this is counted as two bed days according to the available data rather than
half a bed day each. Similarly with the postpartum ward that may stabilize and discharge more than one
patient per bed per day, the data are not able to differentiate between a full bed day and a half bed day,
rather both situations are counted as one bed day.
Table 8: Inpatient Unit costs by final cost centers
Final cost centers Full cost Number of
inpatient
days
Cost per
inpatient
day
Bed
Occupancy
rate
Average
length of
stay (days)
Inpatient pediatrics $ 879,608 10256 $86 75% 11.2
Inpatient medical ward $ 1,667,872 12368 $135 72% 27.4
Inpatient surgical ward $ 2,164,147 13972 $155 118% 16.6
Inpatient NICU $ 791,242 4219 $188 65% 11.0
Inpatient isolation ward $ 218,081 2787 $78 70% 30.0
Inpatient antepartum ward $ 364,088 2636 $138 61% 7.4
Inpatient postpartum ward $ 498,118 12010 $41 167% 8.5
Results presented here are the summary and key findings from the analysis. More detailed results are
presented and described in Annex D of this report along with all the intermediate analysis results. While
many of the assumptions that the study team were required to make have been discussed here, Annex
C contains a complete list of the assumptions used to complete the step down allocation of costs.
35. 17
5. DISCUSSION
This section of the report takes the resulting cost structure described in the results section and uses
these data to provide responses and recommendations for each of the subject areas laid out in the study
objectives as they support the hospital administration’s efforts to move strategically towards being
financially sustainable.
System Question Relevance to sustainability
Budgeting
To what extent, financially, is the hospital’s
current cost structure fully accounted for in
its budget planning?
What specific areas of expenditures may
currently be off-budget and what level of
expenditure does this account for?
Having these cost structure data allows HUM
to increase the accuracy of its future budgets
to ensure that it has accurate estimates of its
future funding needs.
Management
How does resource use change over time; is
the facility realizing economies of scale as it
increases its level of service delivery?
How does resource use compare with other
facilities (where data are available)?
Do the current information systems provide
the data required to track efficiency?
Having accurately measured and consistent
tracked indicators of efficiency and the
systems to produce these measures is critical
for implementing sound management of the
resources available to the facility and
demonstrating this to funders.
Planning
Given their current cost structure and
recent service delivery levels which
departments/services are anticipated to have
unit cost structures that may be appropriate
for cross subsidization to support a revenue
generation strategy without posing access to
care barriers to its focal indigent population?
Having an understanding of cost structure
allows HUM to determine
revenue generation opportunities
cross subsidization opportunities
and how to respond to increasingly
sophisticated health service purchasing
mechanisms like
results based financing contracting
health insurance schemes
Budgeting
Accurate and realistic budgets that align with HUM’s mission and strategic plan are critical.
To what extent, financially, is the hospital’s current cost structure fully accounted for in its budget planning?
As this was the first complete year of HUM’s operation, budgets provided to the study team were
theoretical; for example, some line items were budgeted to be the same every month. Obviously, this
will not be the case in practice as generally speaking, one would expect health service utilization tends
to have some seasonality and therefore operating expenses would be expected to fluctuate from month
to month. As more HUM expenditure and service delivery data become available, it will be possible to
budget more accurately using the MASH.
What specific areas of expenditures may currently be off-budget and what level of expenditure does this account
for?
36. Pharmaceuticals and medical supplies are a major cost driver but full information on their unit costs was
not available at the time of data collection. The study team, in preparing the MASH template, has
identified nearly all of these unit costs so that in future HUM will be able to accurately account for this
resource use. Furthermore, HUM needs to distinguish between donated and purchased resources.
Donated resources should be fully accounted for so that accurate resource needs and utilization are
captured. Given HUM’s commitment to it its indigent population, fundraising will be a necessary part of
its financial strategy. Being able to accurately quantify what resources HUM needs will be helpful as it
approaches different donors who may have different priorities for funding or wish to make in-kind
contributions, for example, pharmaceuticals vs. equipment vs. fuel or other resources.
Depreciation/capital costs were also found to be a major cost driver. Budgets must account for these
costs to ensure that maintenance and replacement funding is set aside. If charging for sophisticated
radiological services is part of a revenue generation strategy, then maintaining and replacing the required
equipment is critical.
Management
Accurately measuring and consistently tracking efficiency indicators as well as having the systems to
produce these measures is critical for implementing sound management of the resources available to the
facility and demonstrating this to funders.
How does resource use change over time; is the facility realizing economies of scale as it increases its level of
service delivery?
All of the average unit costs presented in this analysis are subject to change because HUM is still going
through its initial start-up phase and service delivery levels and expenditures are yet to stabilize. Once
these variables have stabilized, HUM will need to go through a review phase to see how it might allocate
its resources more efficiently. This study’s modelling of its cost structure will assist HUM in this process.
This analysis includes the types of measures that, if monitored over time, can provide information on
where economies of scale are being realized because unit costs should be decreasing, at least in the
medium term. However, it is important to point out that the unit cost estimation should be further
refined to be more specific to the types of services (for example, the types of tests) as well as the types
of patients who receive services from a cost center that delivers services to both internal and external
patients. For example, it will be important to be able to differentiate between types and numbers of
laboratory services used by patients receiving medical care from HUM versus laboratory services used
by referral patients not seen by HUM clinical staff.
How does resource use compare with other facilities (where data are available)?
Currently, the study team is not aware of similar costs data being available for other tertiary-level
facilities in Haiti. This makes cost comparisons impossible. However, as noted previously, primary health
care services are an important output of HUM and these cost data for Haiti are available for
comparison. Such comparisons would probably be of interest to MSPP as it explores options for
providing primary care as efficiently as possible.
Primary care at HUM as a national referral and teaching hospital was integral to the phasing approach to
opening services at the hospital. HUM’s mandate included ensuring access to community-linked primary
care services for the currently underserved target catchment area for primary care services. During the
second phase of operations at HUM there will be a transition of primary care services to the former
CDI location, reinforcing an integrated system for primary care management and referral for secondary
and tertiary level care at HUM. Therefore in terms of cost comparison data, the transition of primary
care services to the CDI location and resulting costs of care would represent the most accurate
measure for costs of primary services through HUM in the long term.
37. 19
Do the current information systems provide the data required to track efficiency?
HUM has several sophisticated information management systems. Therefore, it should not be difficult for
it to ensure that the appropriate data are available in order to provide more specific unit cost estimates
for the future. For example:
For future revenue generation purposes, it will be important for systems to be able to
differentiate between indigent and non-indigent populations receiving care to ensure that
indigent populations remain able to access care free of charge and that this care is adequately
budgeted while non-indigents are charged appropriately. This distinction is key to any effective
revenue generation policies that align with HUM's mission of commitment to its local
populations.
Several units within the hospital will need to be able to aggregate and disaggregate services more
accurately. Examples of this are L&D, where service delivery data are reported by the number
of uniquely identified patients rather than the number of services, the latter of which makes it
impossible to determine when a single patient uses the service more than once and the true
number of visits. Similarly, several inpatient units currently have occupancy rates of more than
100 percent because the utilization data are rounded up to whole bed days and don't capture
situations such as day surgery recovery, or others in which more than one patient occupies a
bed in one day.
The ability to accurately determine unit costs will become even more critical as financing strategies for
HUM are developed and revenue is collected from out-of-pocket fees, insurance companies, and
government contracting.
Planning
HUM recognizes the need to move toward a sustainable financial position.
Given their current cost structures and recent service delivery levels, which departments/services are anticipated
to have unit cost structures that may be appropriate for cross-subsidization to support a revenue generation
strategy without posing access to care barriers to its focal indigent population?
Revenue generation opportunities: This analysis identified some of the major opportunities for revenue
generation that HUM has at hand, including the use of its laboratory, operating room, and radiology
facilities. Given the cost of the equipment being used, it will be important for HUM to market these
facilities and use them to their maximum capacity. In addition, given that providing medical education is
part of its mission, these facilities might enable HUM to provide education to non-Haitian medical
trainees from the Caribbean.
Cross-subsidization opportunities: Although HUM is still in its start-up phase, it already serves patients
from a wide variety of socioeconomic groups, so it is reasonable to plan for some cross-subsidization
between those who are able to pay for services and those who are unable to pay. Examples of services
in this group might be radiology, physiotherapy, and surgical services; their costs are too high to expect
indigent populations to pay out of pocket, but wealthier patients may want to take advantage of HUM's
sophisticated, high-quality facilities and can pay to do so. Similarly, low-cost services may be marked up
and priced to cross-subsidize more expensive services.
Results-based financing (RBF) contracting: Haiti is currently witnessing the implementation of at least
one RBF pilot scheme to support the provision of maternal and neonatal child health. Given HUM's
commitment to providing primary health care, it may be possible for the hospital to participate in the
RBF schemes. Understanding the resources required to provide the significant amount of primary health
38. care delivered by HUM would be important for setting contract prices (particularly if RBF payments are
lower than HUM costs.)
Formal health insurance schemes: Although private insurance coverage is very low in Haiti (1 percent19)
it is highest in the Port-au-Prince region geographically close to HUM. Therefore, understanding its cost
structure allows HUM to potentially contract with formal insurance schemes. These schemes include
the state-run Office d'Assurance Accidents du Travail; Maladie et Maternité (OFATMA), a provider of
worker’s compensation program; the Office Assurance Véhicule Contre Tiers (OAVCT), a state-run
provider of third party vehicle insurance; and private insurance companies.
HUM is an exciting opportunity to establish a level of quality care in Haiti comparable to that of much
wealthier countries for a population that has previously experienced insurmountable barriers to even
basic care. Ensuring that the facility has the resources it needs to continue to deliver this care is an
important responsibility that will require the involvement of many stakeholders. By understanding its
cost structure and being able to discuss its resource needs in evidence-based terms, the administration
of HUM will be able to clearly and accurately estimate and express these needs to the many potential
stakeholders who are increasingly seeking value for money for their contributions, and to take advantage
of the more sophisticated health financing contracting opportunities that are being explored by the
government of Haiti.
19
Preliminary Living Standards Measurement Survey data, personal communication
39. 21
ANNEX A: TOTAL EXPENDITURES BY LINE ITEM
Data types and sources
After determining the cost centers, the next step was to gather the necessary output and cost data. This
includes service volumes, quantities of drug and medical supplies, total staff numbers, direct expenditure
data, and other data such as building space allocations, equipment and vehicle inventories, and other
capital and fixed asset costs.
Expenditure data were collected from the Hospital, as well as procurement and some invoice data for
drugs and medical consumables. Service volume data collection included bed numbers, inpatient
admissions, number of patient days, outpatient visits, and number of procedures per department. In
total, service volume data were collected from all outpatient clinics, all inpatient wards, the emergency
department, the physiotherapy department, the laboratory, the blood bank the pharmacy, the radiology,
the ultrasound, the operating rooms (OR), the mortuary, and some logistical services (kitchen,
transport). Data concerning drugs and medical supplies included quantity of drugs and supplies used by
each cost center as well as some unit costs of specific drugs. Staff positions, numbers of staff,
salaries/wages and any additional compensation or allowances, and where possible, allocation of staff
time spent in different cost centers were also obtained. Expenditure data were collected from the
financial department and included indirect costs (covering utilities, equipment, fuel, maintenance, etc.).
Capital and equipment inventories were collected, as well as square footage of space occupied by the
different wards.
Payroll data
Staff costs (human resource expenses): these represent the human resources expenses incurred for the
provision of services per production unit. In the context of this study, these expenses take into account
the base salaries, the ONA fees borne by the institution and the bonuses received by the employees as a
function of the position and of the category with reference to a code. The staff hired by the hospital can
be classified in 3 subgroups: the local staff (paid in local currency), an intermediate group (paid in US
dollars). These first 2 subgroups are paid directly by the hospital; the third subgroup is composed in part
of expatriates who are paid from Boston (PIH registered office).
As for the distribution of human resources working time between the cost centers, an estimate of this
time (expressed as a percentage) was carried out with the aid of the heads of services and when needed,
with the resource persons of the services in question.
Depreciation assumptions
The depreciation periods used for the costing in the model are variable and depend on the type of
equipment (heavy equipment, light equipment, rolling stock, etc.). This information is generally made
available by the manufacturer. At HUM, the majority of this equipment and certain consumables were
received as gifts and therefore it was difficult to retrace the exact value and the probable useful life of
these goods. Research was conducted through central purchasing websites on the internet on the
theoretical acquisition cost of the equipment. . Despite these efforts certain materials could still not be
assigned a value and these are generally associated with the operational block, with the laboratory, with
radiology, etc. Therefore depreciation on medical equipment may be underestimated. Depreciation
40. periods used were according to information provided by the hospital. All medical and non-medical
equipment were inventoried and depreciated at 5 years with the exception of those discussed below.
Building depreciation
The total acquisition cost of the premises was decided by mutual agreement with the administration and
operations manager. The estimation was made on the basis of a cost per square foot of 60 US$. The
period of amortization recommended by the HUM was 25 years.
Energy systems depreciation
The hospital uses various sources to provide the electricity necessary for the functioning of its units, i.e.
solar energy, and generators using fuel oil. For medical gas (oxygen, vacuum) and water, the hospital has
its own production units. The period of depreciation for this equipment recommended by HUM was 5
years. The study team notes that this can be considered as a relatively short period in relation to the
acquisition costs of such devices compared to their manufacturer warranty. This assumption, combined
with the significant expenditures for the supply of inputs could result in inflated total hospital costs.
Vehicle depreciation
The value of vehicle depreciation was estimated using the sum of the acquisition value of new vehicles
and the current total value of used vehicles vehicle. That information was provided by the Head of the
Transport department. For the depreciation of vehicle HUM proposed 3 years.
Drugs and medical supplies data
The receipt of orders and the distribution of drugs and medical supplies amongst the services are
carried out by the "procurement" service. Each unit or medical department receives its endowment
from the hospital warehouse. The two pharmacies are also supplied from the warehouse. For the period
under study, some medical inputs (drugs and consumables) were ordered and purchased from the PIH
registered office in Boston. The monitoring system at HUM can retrace the endowment and the
consumption recorded by each of the units or departments in the hospital. But the estimate in monetary
terms of the consumption by services is not yet integrated into the system. Where prices for
pharmaceuticals and medical supplies were missing, the study team did an internet search. The IDA
Foundation Electronic Price Indicator (April 2014) database and other internet sources were used to
obtain prices where they were not available from HUM.
Expenditure data
Although budget information was available, the HFG team followed the standard process of using actual
expenditure data which were available for 2014. Actual expenditure data present a more accurate
picture of financial resources used than budgets from which expenditure may vary in practice. Table 9
presents the expenditures utilized in this analysis. In general all the direct costs were estimated by the
study team. We note that pharmaceutical and medical supply expenditures were estimated by the study
team directly as described above. The team estimated depreciation directly as well. Labor was also
estimated by the team using payroll data received from HUM.
41. 23
Table 9: Total expenditures provided for December 2013 in US$
All Costs US$ % of Total Costs
Labor costs $ 7,501,112 49.1%
Drugs and medical supplies $ 1,691,797 11.1%
Depreciation of equipment $ 857,290 5.6%
Staff part time $ 297,257 1.9%
Staff fringe $ 222,954 1.5%
Other staff expenses $ 83,696 0.5%
Food $ 640,920 4.2%
Food special events $ 5,756 0.0%
Medical supplies $ 21,419 0.1%
Computer supplies $ 4,910 0.0%
Cleaning supplies $ 116,715 0.8%
Office Supplies $ 20,794 0.1%
Home supplies $ 8,321 0.1%
Other supplies and accessories $ 15,791 0.1%
Medical services cost $ 19,054 0.1%
Other fuel $ 213,397 1.4%
Energy: generator, electricity, water. $ 908,767 6.0%
Infrastructure Insurance $ 32,424 0.2%
Transport -patient $ 31,658 0.2%
Transport/shipping drugs $ 23,123 0.2%
Other transport $ 33,955 0.2%
Transport -personnel $ 37,897 0.2%
Communications $ 139,512 0.9%
Rental costs $ 109,513 0.7%
42. All Costs US$ % of Total Costs
Educational costs $ 10,718 0.1%
Funtionning costs $ 210,825 1.4%
Miscellaneous $ 136,455 0.9%
Social support payments $ 100,635 0.7%
Travel costs $ 19,001 0.1%
Administrative costs $ 58,271 0.4%
Maintenance $ 232,366 1.5%
Other maintenance $ 38,102 0.2%
Construction/renovation $ 61,343 0.4%
Small medical equipment $ 31,423 0.2%
Other equipment &furniture $ 93,570 0.6%
Energy systems depreciation $ 517,800 3.4%
Buildings depreciation $ 567,667 3.7%
Vehicles depreciation $ 151,000 1.0%
Total costs $ 15,267,208 100%
43. 25
ANNEX B: COST ALLOCATION PROCESS
Cost allocation
The final cost analysis process includes assigning direct costs to the relevant cost centers, determining
the rules for allocating indirect costs, finalizing the “step-down” sequence, and performing final cost
calculations.
The main hospital resources in providing care are: labor, equipment and drugs and medical supplies.
Most of the time those costs can be directly traced to a particular cost center, which is why we defined
them as “direct costs”: sum of payroll, capital depreciation and medical drugs/supplies consumption
specific to each cost center. We further define “fixed direct costs” (payroll + capital depreciation) and
“variable direct costs” (drugs+ medical supplies consumption). This is to make a distinction between the
direct costs that instantly change with the volume of patient (variable)and the one that do not instantly
depend on the volume of medical activity(fixed).
Some hospital resources are shared in a way that makes it impossible or impractical to measure directly
how much of the resource is used in a particular cost center: here there are referred to as “indirect
costs”. For administration, communication and transportation costs, an indirect allocation process was
used to distribute them across the cost centers. Indirect cost allocation is based on identified “cost
drivers”, or indicators that most directly influence the cost being incurred. These could be floor space
utilized, number of staff, number of patients, etc. The fixed and variable direct costs defined above can
also be used as criteria for indirect cost allocation.
In the step-down sequence, cost centers are assigned to different “levels.” Centers at the top “supply”
the centers below them with some kind of service, and they in turn do the same for the centers below
them. The assumption is that a cost center is either a supplier or a customer to another cost center.
For example, in this analysis we assumed that the cleaning/landscaping and laundry unit ‘serves’ the
administrative department while acknowledging that the general administration/HR department may
offer management services to the cleaning/landscaping and laundry unit employees. In this case (and
others) the provision of services in not necessarily one directional, but, in order to conclude the step-
down process, a decision was made as to which order is either larger (in terms of the value of services
offered) or that the value of services is small enough that the hierarchy of levels will not affect final costs
in a substantive way.
44.
45. 27
ANNEX C: STEP DOWN ALLOCATION ASSUMPTIONS
In order to conduct the step-down allocation, each cost center was given allocation base/criteria, which
was used to allocate the total costs from that cost center across all the remaining cost centers at lower
levels. Table 10 lists the allocation bases used for each cost center, as well as any assumptions or
calculations used to determine the amount of the base unit to be applied to each of the remaining cost
centers.
Table 10: Step down allocation assumptions
Cost Center Allocation Base Assumptions
Administrative Services and Logistics
Cleaning/Landscaping/laundry
Cleaning staff
distribution
The distribution of cleaning staff across the different cost
centers (number of staff for that cost center)determine
the importance of that cost center in terms of
corresponding :more resources needed for cleaning.
General administration/HR Staff number
Calculated from the hospital payroll data. Where
necessary staff was distributed to different cost centers
according to time spent in that cost center. The more
staff, the more management needed.
Transport Distance driven
Number of kilometers driven for each cost center. The
higher the number of kilometers driven for a cost center,
the higher its proportion of the shared transport costs
should be.
Financing and Accounting
Staff number
Calculated from the hospital payroll data. Where
necessary staff was distributed to different cost centers
according to time spent in that cost center. The more
staff, the more management needed.
Building Maintenance
Floor space
Building space by square feet was measured and reported
based on blueprints for the hospital. The more space
used, the more resources needed for maintenance.
Medical Equipment
maintenance
Number of
interventions
The department provided the list of interventions
provided to each of the cost centers that it served. The
higher the number of interventions, the higher the
corresponding maintenance costs.
Kitchen Number meals
served
We got the number of meals served to each department.
The higher the number of meals, the higher the share of
the kitchen corresponding costs.
Security Value of equipment
Calculated from the depreciation cost of equipment.
Allocated to all cost centers. The higher the value of the
equipment, the higher the resources for its protection.
Procurement
Direct costs
Direct costs were calculated by summing drugs /medical
supplies consumption, labor and equipment depreciation
attributable to a cost center. The higher the value, the
more resources used for provision.
46. Cost Center Allocation Base Assumptions
Medical Information System fixed direct costs
Fixed direct costs were calculated summing labor costs
and depreciation of equipment directly attributable to a
cost center. The more expensive a center is to run, the
higher its proportion of the shared costs should be.
General IT
fixed direct costs
Fixed direct costs were calculated summing labor costs
and depreciation of equipment directly attributable to a
cost center. The more expensive a center is to run, the
higher its proportion of the shared costs should be.
Residence
fixed direct costs
Fixed direct costs were calculated summing labor costs
and depreciation of equipment directly attributable to a
cost center. The more expensive a center is to run, the
higher its proportion of the shared costs should be.
Teaching
Number of
residents
There were 23 interns assigned to final medical cost
centers based on a list received from the Hospital
Accounts team.
Intermediate Medical Services
Pharmacy
Percentage
estimates
Based on direct consumption (cost) of drugs and
consumables reported in the pharmacy records.
Laboratory Number of tests As reported by the laboratory records
Blood Bank
Number of units of
blood
As reported by the Blood bank records
Mortuary
Number of
cadavers
As reported by the mortuary records
Radiology Number of exams As reported by radiology and wards records.
Operating Room
Number of
surgeries
As reported by operating rooms and wards records.
47. 29
ANNEX D: STEP DOWN ALLOCATION RESULTS
Step 1: Classify costs between direct and indirect costs
All line item expenditures listed in Table 9 were classified into direct or indirect categories using the
following criteria:
Direct costs: the costs that can be directly traced to a particular cost center e.g. salaries, drugs, etc.
Indirect costs: the costs that are shared among many cost centers e.g. utilities, maintenance etc.
Step 2: Allocate direct and indirect costs across cost centers
This cost analysis divided cost centers into “administrative services and logistics,” “intermediate medical
services,” and “final medical services.” The goal of this first stage of the hospital costing is to define a
total cost for each of the hospital’s administrative/logistical, intermediate medical and final medical cost
centers. This is accomplished by first accumulating the direct costs20 of each cost center and second by
allocating the indirect costs21 in the second step using the appropriate allocation statistics. This cost per
service center is needed information for budget management and planning at the hospital level. The cost
structure HUM is presented in Table 11,
Table 12 and
20 In this report, the term direct cost means costs for the main resources in health care production that are easily linked
to a specific cost center: Labor, Equipment, Drugs and medical supplies.
21 Indirect costs refer to all other hospital costs.
48. Table 13.
The final medical services are the most expensive to run with 46 percent of total costs, followed by
logistical services (35 percent) and intermediate medical services (19 percent). The top cost center in
terms of cost is the Inpatient Surgical ward (7.3%) followed by the operating room (6.9%) and the
General administration (6.2 %).
49. 31
Table 11: Administrative and Logistical Cost Allocation
Cost centers Direct costs
(USD)
% Indirect
costs(USD)
% Total
costs(USD)
%
General Administration/HR 644,781 6.4% 305,639 5.9% 950,421 6.2%
Transport 131,222 1.3% 440,704 8.4% 571,926 3.7%
Financing and Accounting 229,562 2.3% 38,728 0.7% 268,290 1.8%
Building Maintenance(facilities and
operations)
261,864 2.6% 204,317 3.9% 466,180 3.1%
Equipment maintenance (Biomedical) 128,363 1.3% 40,952 0.8% 169,315 1.1%
Kitchen 77,765 0.8% 448,579 8.6% 526,345 3.4%
Security 144,891 1.4% 68,365 1.3% 213,256 1.4%
Procurement 132,140 1.3% 39,477 0.8% 171,617 1.1%
Medical information system 377,277 3.8% 95,231 1.8% 472,508 3.1%
General IT 98,827 1.0% 26,717 0.5% 125,545 0.8%
Residence 39,101 0.4% 405,867 7.8% 444,968 2.9%
Teaching 171,821 1.7% 205,485 3.9% 377,306 2.5%
Total Admin/Logistical Services 2,678,407 26.7% 2,663,773 51.1% 5,342,180 35.0%
Table 12: Intermediate Medical Services Cost Allocation
Cost centers Direct
costs(USD)
% Indirect
costs(USD)
% Total
costs(USD)
%
Pharmacy 557,850 5.6% 246,878 4.7% 804,728 5.3%
Morgue 8,551 0.1% 7,338 0.1% 15,889 0.1%
Laboratory 414,818 4.1% 79,414 1.5% 494,231 3.2%
Radiology 380,294 3.8% 66,780 1.3% 447,075 2.9%
Blood Bank 49,028 0.5% 14,274 0.3% 63,302 0.4%
Operating Room 626,021 6.2% 425,711 8.2% 1,051,732 6.9%
Total Intermediate Medical
Services 2,036,562 20.3% 840,395 16.1% 2,876,957 18.8%
50. Table 13: Final Medical Services Cost Allocation
Cost centers Direct
costs(USD)
% Indirect
costs(USD)
% Total
costs(USD)
%
Outpatient General 312,122 3.1% 148,689 2.9% 460,811 3.0%
Outpatient Dental clinic 211,449 2.1% 37,071 0.7% 248,520 1.6%
Outpatient Community health 322,569 3.2% 115,300 2.2% 437,870 2.9%
Outpatient women health 447,326 4.5% 132,006 2.5% 579,332 3.8%
Outpatient Pediatrics 59,355 0.6% 29,459 0.6% 88,814 0.6%
Outpatient Mental health 21,902 0.2% 14,002 0.3% 35,905 0.2%
Outpatient Oncology 313,553 3.1% 68,048 1.3% 381,601 2.5%
Rehabilitation/Physiotherapy 238,404 2.4% 39,729 0.8% 278,133 1.8%
Accident & Emergency 679,803 6.8% 143,785 2.8% 823,588 5.4%
Inpatient Labor and Delivery 383,890 3.8% 146,903 2.8% 530,793 3.5%
Inpatient Pediatrics 305,686 3.0% 126,884 2.4% 432,571 2.8%
Inpatient Medical Ward 631,623 6.3% 181,003 3.5% 812,627 5.3%
Inpatient Surgical Ward 875,566 8.7% 238,947 4.6% 1,114,513 7.3%
Inpatient NICU 253,022 2.5% 87,350 1.7% 340,372 2.2%
Inpatient Isolation ward 42,238 0.4% 61,845 1.2% 104,083 0.7%
Inpatient Antenatal ward 92,687 0.9% 66,966 1.3% 159,653 1.0%
Inpatient Postnatal ward 144,034 1.4% 74,853 1.4% 218,887 1.4%
Total Final Medical Services 5,335,230 53.1% 1,712,841 32.8% 7,048,071 46.2%
Table 14: Total Direct and Indirect Cost Allocation
Cost centers Direct
costs(USD)
% Indirect
costs(USD)
% Total
costs(USD)
%
Admin/logistical Services
2,678,407 26.7% 2,663,773 51.1% 5,342,180 35.0%
Intermediate Medical Services 2,036,562 20.3% 840,395 16.1% 2,876,957 18.8%
Final Medical Services 5,335,230 53.1% 1,712,841 32.8% 7,048,071 46.2%
TOTAL 10,050,198 100% 5,217,010 100% 15,267,208 100%
51. 33
Step 3: Allocate administrative/logistical costs to intermediate
and final cost centers
Step three in the allocation process takes the administrative and logistics cost center costs and allocates
them to the intermediate and final cost centers. The criteria used for allocating any cost center’s costs
(described in Annex B) reflects the use of that cost center’s services by the others and may include
space utilized, number of staff, or number of patients. At the end of step three, the costs appear as
shown in
Table 15.
Table 15: Administrative and logistical cost allocations to intermediate and final cost centers
Cost Centers Total Cost
before
allocation(USD
)
Administrative and
logistical costs
allocated
Total Cost after
allocation(USD)
% of
total
cost
Value in US$ % of total
Pharmacy 804,728 137,848 2.6% 942,576 6%
Morgue 15,889 23,310 0.4% 39,199 0%
Laboratory 494,231 152,772 2.9% 647,003 4%
Radiology 447,075 224,839 4.2% 671,914 4%
Blood Bank 63,302 107,715 2.0% 171,017 1%
Operating Room 1,051,732 372,759 7.0% 1,424,491 9%
Total Intermediate Medical
Services 2,876,957 1,019,243 19% 3,896,200 26%
Outpatient General 460,811 225,095 4.2% 685,906 4%
Outpatient Dental clinic 248,520 57,396 1.1% 305,915 2%
Outpatient Community health 437,870 334,392 6.3% 772,262 5%
Outpatient women health 579,332 222,639 4.2% 801,972 5%
Outpatient Pediatrics 88,814 77,302 1.4% 166,116 1%
Outpatient Mental health 35,905 30,214 0.6% 66,119 0%
Outpatient Oncology 381,601 149,395 2.8% 530,996 3%
Physiotherapy 278,133 160,354 3.0% 438,487 3%
Accident & Emergency 823,588 582,161 10.9% 1,405,749 9%
Labor and Delivery 530,793 330,750 6.2% 861,543 6%
Inpatient Pediatrics 432,571 296,589 5.6% 729,160 5%
Inpatient Medical Ward 812,627 592,139 11.1% 1,404,766 9%
Inpatient Surgical Ward 1,114,513 598,944 11.2% 1,713,457 11%
Inpatient NICU 340,372 259,858 4.9% 600,230 4%
Inpatient Isolation ward 104,083 86,790 1.6% 190,873 1%
Inpatient Antepartum ward 159,653 129,625 2.4% 289,278 2%
Inpatient Postpartum ward 218,887 189,294 3.5% 408,180 3%
Total Final medical services 7,048,071 4,322,937 81% 11,371,008 74%
Total 9,925,028 5,342,180 100% 15,267,208 100%
52. Note that the total under column “Administrative and logistical Costs Allocated” equals the subtotal in
Table 11, and is added to the Total Costs column to its left to calculate the new totals for each
intermediate and final cost center. Further details on allocation assumptions can be found in Annex B
above. Intermediate cost centers now account for about 26 percent of the total hospital cost, and final
cost centers for the remaining 74 percent.
Step 4: Allocate intermediate costs centers’ costs across the
final medical services
The fourth step is to allocate the costs of the intermediate medical service cost centers to the final cost
centers. This is done on the basis of the usage of these intermediate cost center services by the final
cost centers. The result is the “full costs by final medical cost center,” as shown in Table 16.
Intermediate cost centers were allocated by direct consumption for Pharmacy, number of tests for
Laboratory, number of exams for Radiology, number of surgeries for Operating Theater, number of
cadavers for the Mortuary, number of units of blood for the Blood Bank. Further detail regarding these
allocation bases and assumptions are included in Annex B.
Table 16: Full costs by final medical cost center
Cost Centers
Cost before
allocation(USD)
Medical intermediate
costs allocated Full Cost after
allocation(USD)
% of
total
costValue in US$ % of total
Outpatient General 685,906 635,369 16.3% 1,321,275 9%
Outpatient Dental clinic 305,915 182,260 4.7% 488,175 3%
Outpatient Community health 772,262 2,902 0.1% 775,163 5%
Outpatient women health 801,972 180,235 4.6% 982,207 6%
Outpatient Pediatrics 166,116 96,916 2.5% 263,032 2%
Outpatient Mental health 66,119 116 0.0% 66,235 0%
Outpatient Oncology 530,996 336,231 8.6% 867,227 6%
Physiotherapy 438,487 30,921 0.8% 469,408 3%
Accident & Emergency 1,405,749 635,314 16.3% 2,041,063 13%
Labor and Delivery 861,543 548,724 14.1% 1,410,267 9%
Inpatient Pediatrics 729,160 150,448 3.9% 879,608 6%
Inpatient Medical Ward 1,404,766 263,106 6.8% 1,667,872 11%
Inpatient Surgical Ward 1,713,457 450,690 11.6% 2,164,147 14%
Inpatient NICU 600,230 191,012 4.9% 791,242 5%
Inpatient Isolation ward 190,873 27,208 0.7% 218,081 1%
Inpatient Antepartum ward 289,278 74,810 1.9% 364,088 2%
Inpatient Postpartum ward 408,180 89,938 2.3% 498,118 3%
Total 11,371,008 3,896,200 100% 15,267,208 100%
Inpatient cost centers accounted for about 66 percent of costs, while outpatient services accounted for
about 34 percent. Surgical ward was the largest single cost center (14 percent) followed A&E (13
percent), by medical ward (11 percent) and L&D (9 percent), all of them inpatient services.
Accident and Emergency (outpatient plus inpatient) accounted for a high proportion of full costs: 13
percent. Staff interviews suggest that a large majority of hospital inpatients are admitted through the
A&E, which could be causing an inflated cost that does not reflect true patient needs, but data to
support this claim were unavailable. If true, the Hospital could benefit from determining a more efficient
way to admit patients not in need of A&E care.