1 / 10

Harmonization & Aid Effectiveness in Health:- **********************************

Harmonization & Aid Effectiveness in Health:- **********************************. Between Health Workers & Communities: The Equity Gauge Zambia Experiences. Ms Mary M. Tuba & Dr Thabale Jack Ngulube Centre for Health, Science & Social Research (CHESSORE) P. O. Box 320168, Woodlands

mio
Télécharger la présentation

Harmonization & Aid Effectiveness in Health:- **********************************

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. Harmonization & Aid Effectiveness in Health:-********************************** Between Health Workers & Communities: The Equity Gauge Zambia Experiences Ms Mary M. Tuba & Dr Thabale Jack Ngulube Centre for Health, Science & Social Research (CHESSORE) P. O. Box 320168, Woodlands Lusaka, Zambia chessore@zamnet.zm

  2. The Aid & Harmonization Cascade • Effective aid has the qualities of being: • Harmonized • Predictable • Contributing to overall development • Efficiently used [audits, accountability, enforcement] • Associated with sustainable benefits/ outcomes

  3. Health, Health System & Communities • It has been repeatedly observed that to the majority in Zambia, the modern health system is largely perceived to be foreign, and only good for addressing immediate needs • Otherwise before and after their needs are met; the tendency for many is to stay aloof of everyday happenings in health • This trend is further weakened by an uneven distribution of power between health workers and communities served

  4. Top-Down Vs Bottom approaches • The current government policy on effective use of available resources lays emphasis on leadership, accountability and partnership, with bottom-up planning and implementation • However, evidence coming from the ground indicates that communities are unable to hold the health system and health workers accountable • Communities are largely powerless • And the bottom-up approach is run along lines of bureaucracy and its procedures; with little harmonization for incorporating community interests • Planning and budgeting is based along an objective criteria for disease burden that is under the sole control of health workers, • For many in the community, the formal health system can be the place of last resort, sometimes used in combination with traditional remedies.

  5. A Perception on Current Situation on Harmonization & Aid effectiveness at the Grassroots in Zambia Technocratic Bureaucratic Approaches Planned Change BOTTLE NECK Social Cultural Traditional Contextual Factors Local institutions New Roles / Responsibilities Health competent communities

  6. For Aid Effectiveness at the grassroots • The Health system should be perceived to be ‘a local institution’; that addresses local health needs in all it dimensions • Communities need to accept new roles and responsibilities in making this happen, • In order for the above to happen communities require to be empowered and engaged with the health system = Health Competent communities. • This process to achieve this takes time – requiring ‘breaking the ice’, imparting skills, and re-freezing the new arrangements/ procedures that result from the desired positive experience

  7. The Equity Gauge Zambia Experience with Effective community participation as a prelude to aid effectiveness on the ground • De-freezing existing practices in order to pave way for new approaches (2001-2005) • Identifying a concept for change – EQUITY policy statement • Appropriate vehicle for change – Applied Research (Equity Gauge concept, along three pillars of advocacy, public participation & measurement) • Through Drama, Poetry, Songs & Sermons

  8. EGZ Experiences (II) • Imparting Skills [2001 – Present (2008)] • Defining Equity as social concept (not medical concept) • Research skills • Research on inequities (packaging the local evidence in a participatory manner) • PRA Skills for engagement with communities and the health system • Decision-making practices (DAD, ADD) • Brain-storming • Social mapping • Power and power relations • Computer & Internet training • Management skills (needed but not developed)

  9. EGZ Experiences (III) • Re-Freezing [2006 – On-going] • Being fused in, but this will be the next for emphasis in programme implementation, • But the process and requisites for dynamics of planned change are now known – within the Zambian context [Guide being developed] • The next challenges are to take on a health programme and implement the systematized change dynamics (MDRs and SMAGs for maternal health scale-up programmes)

  10. THANK YOU chessore@zamnet.zm thabalejackngulube@yahoo.com tuba.mary@gmail.com

More Related