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Benchmarks of Fairness for Health Sector Reform in Developing Countries: Overview

This overview discusses the benchmarks of fairness for health sector reform in developing countries, including intersectoral public health, financial barriers to access, nonfinancial barriers to access, comprehensiveness of benefits, equitable financing, efficacy, efficiency, quality of health care, administrative efficiency, democratic accountability, and patient and provider autonomy.

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Benchmarks of Fairness for Health Sector Reform in Developing Countries: Overview

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  1. Benchmarks of Fairness for Health Sector Reform in Developing Countries: Overview Norman Daniels PIH, HSPH Ndaniels@hsph.harvard.edu

  2. 1. Intersectoral public health 2. Financial barriers to equitable access 3. Nonfinancial barriers to access 4. Comprehensiveness of benefits, tiering 5. Equitable financing 6.Efficacy,efficiency,quality of health care 7. Administrative efficiency 8. Democratic accountability, empowerment 9. Patient and provider autonomy The Adapted Benchmarks

  3. Connections to social justice • Equity • B1Intersectoral public health, B2-3 Access, B4Tiering, B5 Financing • Democratic Accountability • B8, B9Choice • Efficiency • B6 Clinical Efficacy and quality • B7 Administrative efficiency

  4. Structure of BMs • B1-9 Main Goals • Criteria -- Key aspects • Sub criteria-- main means or elements • Evidence Base + Evaluation • Indicators • Scoring Rules

  5. WHO BM Scope Cross national Nat, subnat Objective Current perform Reform eval Purpose Motivate Deliberate Product Index, ranks Scores Who uses National pol mk Various Requires Good info Info, tr. people Problems Inform change? Subjectivity? Overlap Move to reforms complementary WHO Framework vs BM

  6. B1: Intersectoral Public Health • Degree to which reform increases per cent of population (differentiated) with: basic nutrition, adequate housing, clean water, air, worplace protection, education and health education (various types), public safety and violence reduction • Info infrastructure for monitoring health status inequities • Degree reform engages in active intersectoral effort

  7. B2: financial barriers to access • Nonformal sector • Universal access to appropriate basic package • Drugs • Medical transport • Formal Sector Social/Private Insurance • Encourages expansion of prepayment • Family coverage • Drug, med transport • Integrate various groups, uniform benefits

  8. B3: Nonfinancial barriers to access • Reduction of geographical maldistribution of facilities, services, personnel, other • Gender • Cultural -- language, attitude to disease, uninformed reliance on traditional practitioners • Discrimination -- race, religion, class, sexual orientation, disease

  9. B6: Efficacy, efficiency and quality of health care • Primary health care focus • Population based, outreach, community participation, integration with system, incentives, appropriate resource allocation • Implementation of evidence based practice • Health policies, public health, therapeutic interventions • Measures to improve quality • Regular assessment, accreditation, training

  10. B8: Democratic accountability and empowerment • Explicit public detailed procedures for evaluating services, full public reports • Explicit deliberative procedures for resource allocation (accountability for reasonableness) • Fair grievance procedures, legal, non-legal • Global budgeting • Privacy protection • Enforcement of compliance with rules, laws • Strengthening civil society (advocacy, debate)

  11. Why is evidence base important? • Evidence base makes evaluation objective • Making evaluation objective means: • Explicit interpretation of criteria • Explicit rules for assessing whether criteria met and the degree to which alternatives meet them • Objectivity provides basis for policy deliberation • Gives points of disagreement a focus that requires reasons and evidence

  12. Evidence Base: Components • Adapted Criteria--convert generic benchmarks into country-specific tool • Reflect purpose of application • Reflect local conditions • Indicators • Outcomes • Process • revisability • Scoring rules • Connect indicators to scale of evaluation • Specify in advance

  13. Process of selecting indicators • Clarity about purpose • Type of criterion determines type of indicator • Outcomes vs process indicator appropriate • Standard vs invented for purpose • Requires clarity about mechanisms of reform • Availability of information • Consultation with experts • Final selection in light of tentative scoring rules • Further revision in light of field testing

  14. Scoring Benchmarks Reform relative to status quo -5 0 +5 Or use qualitative symbols, --- or +++

  15. Scoring Rules: General Points • Map indicator results onto ordinal scale of reform outcomes • Final selection of indicators should be done as scoring rules are developed, so refinements can be made • Scoring rules should be adopted prior to data collection to increase objectivity, but may have to be revised in light of problems

  16. Thailand: survey of various groups judging based on discussion of evidence Strengths: range of views, involvement of larger groups Weakness: vaguer basis for judgment? Guatemala, Cameroon: team evaluation based on indicators, scoring rules Strengths: clarity about evidence base for evaluation Weakness: trained team, narrow input Two approaches to evidence

  17. Thailand Guatemala Cameroon Zambia--HIV/AIDS Yunnan, China-rural reform Ecuador, public health, comprehensive Vietnam-comprehensive reform Pakistan- community use Chile, Nicaragua, Sri Lanka, Nigeria (ACOSHED), Bangladesh APHA Later

  18. Plans for Benchmarks • Research Network for all sites, other efforts at monitoring reform • Funding for country level projects using adapted benchmarks • Coordination with WHO, regional organizations of WHO, World Bank, USAID

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