1 / 14

Keeping promises, Measuring results: The Global Strategy and Accountability for

Keeping promises, Measuring results: The Global Strategy and Accountability for Women's and Children's Health. Bernadette Daelmans Family, Women and Children's Health Cluster World Health Organization. By 2015: Saving 16 million lives of women and children

lukas
Télécharger la présentation

Keeping promises, Measuring results: The Global Strategy and Accountability for

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. Keeping promises, Measuring results: The Global Strategy and Accountability for Women's and Children's Health Bernadette Daelmans Family, Women and Children's Health Cluster World Health Organization

  2. By 2015: Saving 16 million lives of women and children Preventing 33 million unwanted pregnancies Protecting 88 million children from stunting Protecting 120 million children from pneumonia The Global Strategy (2010)

  3. Commitments made 93 commitments made in 2010 amounting to over US$ 40 billion 39 Low-income countries; 21 NGOs; 15 high income countries; 14 foundations; 14 business community Many new commitments were announced at the Every Woman Every Child first –year anniversary. 29 Low-income countries; 4 high income countries; 12 UN and partnerships; 2 philanthropic institutions; 40 NGOs & civil society; 15 business community; 11 HCW and academic institutions Graphs of commitments: http://www.who.int/pmnch/topics/part_publications/2011_pmnch_report/en/index4.html

  4. Commission on Information and Accountability • Called at the request of the UN Secretary-General as an integral part of the UN Global Strategy for Women's and Children's Health • Commission's Report (advanced) released during the World Health Assembly, May 2011 • Recommendations discussed in high level meetings • World Health Assembly - resolution WHA 64.12 • G8 meeting • Agreement to focus follow-up on 74 countries - 49 lowest income countries (Global Strategy) + 25 additional high burden countries (Countdown) • Commission's report officially released by Dr Ban Ki-Moon, September 20, 2011 • Independent expert group announced – Carmen Barroso, Zulfikar Bhutta, Richard Horton, Dean Jamison, Joy Phumaphi, Marleen Temmerman, Miriam Were 3

  5. Key principles National leadership and ownership of results Strengthen countries’ capacity to monitor and evaluate Reduce the reporting burden by aligning efforts with the systems countries use to monitor and evaluate their national health strategies Strengthen and harmonize existing international mechanisms to track progress on all commitments made Founded on the fundamental human right of every woman and child to the highest attainable standard of health, and on achieving equity in health 5

  6. 10 Recommendations Holding all stakeholders accountable Recommendations 1-3: Better information for better results Recommendations 4-6: Better tracking of resources for women's and children's health Recommendations 7-10: Better oversight of results and resources: nationally and globally 6

  7. Measuring results • Vital events:By 2015, all countries have taken significant steps to establish a system for registration of births, deaths and causes … • Health indicators:By 2012, the same 11 indicators across the continuum of care: reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health, including HIV … • Innovation:By 2015, all countries have integrated the use of Information and Communication Technologies …

  8. Indicators for results Eleven indicators Three tracer indicators: maternal mortality ratio under-5 child mortality (with the proportion of newborn deaths) children under 5 who are stunted Eight coverage indicators: met need for contraception antenatal care coverage antiretroviral prophylaxis among HIV positive pregnant women to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV skilled attendant at birth postnatal care (within 48 hours of childbirth) for mother and child breastfeeding exclusively for 6 months three doses of the combined diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus vaccine children with suspected pneumonia receiving antibiotics. 8

  9. Resource tracking:By 2015, all 74 countries where 98% of maternal and child deaths take place are tracking and reporting, at a minimum, two aggregate resource indicators total health expenditure by financing source, per capita; and total reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health expenditure by financing source, per capita. Country Compacts:By 2012, in order to facilitate resource tracking, “compacts” between country governments and all major development partners … Reaching women and children: By 2015, all governments have the capacity to regularly review health spending … Tracking resources

  10. National oversight:By 2012, all countries have established national accountability mechanisms that are transparent, that are inclusive of all stakeholders, and that recommend remedial action, as required. Transparency:By 2013, all stakeholders are publicly sharing information on commitments, resources provided and results achieved annually, at both national and international levels. Better oversight

  11. Key steps in follow-up at country level • Development of national plan to augment information and accountability • Monitoring 11 core results indicators – HMIS, surveys, use of ICT • Strengthening registration of births and deaths • Quality assessments – maternal and perinatal deaths reviews, quality of care surveys • Tracking financial resources – domestic and external commitments, expenditures • Development of a national digital health strategy • Annual review and action – with all relevant stakeholders incl. human rights bodies • Advocacy – National Countdown conferences, parliamentarians, community participation

  12. Putting recommendations into action • Multi-stakeholder work plan developed through consultative process with all interested partiesCosts: US$ 88 million • Roles and responsibilities for many partners: H4+, global health partnerships (PMNCH, HMN, GAVI, others), IPU, civil society organizations, academics and researchers, country representatives, private sector • Funding commitments for implementation made by Norway, Canada and United Kingdom

  13. Role of WHO and UN partners • Hosting the ERG secretariat • Facilitating the implementation of the workplan and mobilizing resources • Coordinating technical support to each of the recommendations – roll out in countries • Building partnership and capitalizing on partner' strengths • Promoting and supporting innovation

  14. Action can be taken now • Strengthen health systems and improve quality of health services • Improve measurement and use of data • Use innovation and technology to disseminate and share information

More Related