1 / 21

Evaluation and Documentation of Innovations in Public S ervices

Evaluation and Documentation of Innovations in Public S ervices. Meenakshi Gautham , PhD Research Fellow & IDEAS Country Coordinator – India London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. Improving health worldwide. ideas.lshtm.ac.uk. A public service innovation can be….

laddie
Télécharger la présentation

Evaluation and Documentation of Innovations in Public S ervices

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluation and Documentation of Innovations in Public Services MeenakshiGautham, PhD Research Fellow & IDEAS Country Coordinator – India London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK Improving health worldwide ideas.lshtm.ac.uk

  2. A public service innovation can be…. A PRODUCT… • Drugs /diagnostics • Technology • Seeds and crops • A PROCEDURE… • Training or educational strategy • Therapy • Waste disposal • A SYSTEM... • Home births to institutional deliveries • New markets for traditional crafts • Privatisation of a public service

  3. Definition • The replacement of a previous method with a new approach that provides SUSTAINABLE and COMPETITIVE benefit

  4. Why is evaluation important? • Benefit of the innovation is uncertain; to fund or not to fund? • Uncertainty can lead to two risks: - services of limited benefit are financed with public money OR - access to much more beneficial services is denied or not explored • Good evaluation can minimise both risks

  5. Steps in evaluation of a public service innovation STEP 1: Test feasibility and usability of the innovation Examples: ease of application, lower cost, extensive participation and acceptance, no immediate side effects STEP 2: Confirmation of the benefits with surrogate parameters Examples: Reduction in tumour size, increased frequency of interactions, increase in enrolment, increase in standardization of healthcare STEP 3: Confirmation of the desired end point benefits Examples: Improves quality of life, improves survival, changes behaviour, sustainable improvements in quality and access to services

  6. Things to keep in mind • Underlying theory of change: how will the innovation work to bring about the desired result ? • Impact of context: Innovation + context = outcome • Pay attention to the process as well as the outcomes • Link evaluation with continuous feedback

  7. An example from IDEAS • Do innovations in maternal and newborn services lead to improved maternal and newborn survival? -excerpts from a presentation prepared for NRHM senior officials

  8. Learning questions to be addressed: In areas where Gates grantees are working: • Do innovations lead to enhanced interactions between families and frontline workers, and does the coverage of critical interventions/best practices increase as a result? • Are the innovations cost-effective? • How do enhanced interactions affect coverage of critical interventions?

  9. Theory of change Credit: Dr BilalAvan Credit: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Innovation introduced in grantee key districts SCALE UP adoption of innovations beyond grantees’ areas Innovation scaled-up

  10. Theory of change More: Better: Equitable: Cost-effective: Num. interactions between FLWs and individual women increase; More women have FLW interactions FLW and facilities properly equipped to provide good quality care; FLWs are well informed about the components of good quality care; FLWs take appropriate actions during interactions; Women know more about danger signs; Women improve their care seeking Improvements happen for all women irrespective of socio-economic status The innovations that are implemented are cost-effective Credit: Dr BilalAvan Credit: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Innovation introduced in grantee key districts SCALE UP adoption of innovations beyond grantees’ areas Innovation scaled-up

  11. More pregnancy interactions: Women with a birth in last 12 months

  12. More + equitable pregnancy interactions: % with ≥4 pregnancy care interactions by household SES

  13. Better pregnancy interactions: Women with a birth in last 12 months

  14. Coverage of pregnancy interventions: Women with a birth in last 12 months

  15. More intra-partum interactions: Women with a birth in last 12 months *N advised to seek extra care: Intervention=13; Comparison=19

  16. Coverage of post-natal interventions: Women with a birth in last 12 months *Don’t know responses excluded

  17. Summary Overall: Frequency of interactions, institutional births increased, but quality is lacking PREGNANCY • Almost all pregnancy care delivered in facilities, not at home • Three –quarters of women had at least 1 pregnancy care interaction • One-third had at least 4 interactions – predominantly the least poor • Frontline Worker knowledge of the core elements of focussed pregnancy care was low and just 7% of women received all elements • Approximately three-quarters of women had TT vaccine protection, one half had iron prophylaxis POST-NATAL • Delayed bathing not being practiced in government facilities

  18. Documenting for advocacy Policy discussion paper Newspaper article Web based social media – blogs etc Scientific papers

  19. A thinking exercise • Think of an innovation in public services • Think of what ultimate public benefit it will bring about and how • Discuss with your partner : 1 or 2 indicators for Step 1, Step 2 and Step 3 • Any two types of documentations that you could develop related to this innovation

  20. Thank You! IDEAS Project London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT In India: c/o Public Health Foundation of India Plot 47, Sector 44, Gurgaon Institutional Area Email: Meenakshi.gautham@lshtm.ac.uk Website: ideas.lshtm.ac.uk

  21. Contact us IDEAS Project London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine 4th floor Keppel Street London WC1E 7HT Email: ideas@lshtm.ac.uk Website: ideas.lshtm.ac.uk Newsletter sign up: eepurl.com/j3iBz Twitter: @LSHTM_IDEAS

More Related