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Maternal Health in Kenya: An Important Agenda Abdo Yazbeck, Health Practice Manager Lead Health Economist World Bank Nairobi, August 2014.

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Presentation on theme: "Maternal Health in Kenya: An Important Agenda Abdo Yazbeck, Health Practice Manager Lead Health Economist World Bank Nairobi, August 2014."— Presentation transcript:

1 Maternal Health in Kenya: An Important Agenda Abdo Yazbeck, Health Practice Manager Lead Health Economist World Bank Nairobi, August 2014

2 Outline  Which comes first, Health or Wealth?  How is Kenya doing on health outcomes?  Kenya’s health systems challenges (financing, quality, coverage)  Amazing county level variations in performance  Global best practice for health systems and maternal health  Take home messages

3 Health or Wealth First? In East Asia, both Health and Wealth Improved fast, but Health Came First and Drove Wealth (e.g. the Demographic Dividend) Green Line=GDP/capita; Blue dots=Child Mortality (4 graphs)

4 Health or Wealth First? In SS Africa, Wealth is growing fast, but Health is not (Wealth is not Producing Health)

5 HEALTH OUTCOMES A Mixed Story for Kenya

6 Under-5 Mortality and health exp.: deviations from estimates based on per capita income and education Kenya underspending with average Under-5 Mortality

7 Child and Infant Health outcomes Start-Stop-Start Performance on Child Health in Kenya

8 8 Maternal Mortality in Kenya and Neighboring Countries Kenya’s Maternal Mortality Rates Declined, but more modestly compared to countries in the neighborhood

9 Female Adult Mortality Rank Kenya’s Female Adult Mortality position faltering

10 TFR 1960-2012 (Stagnation in Kenya) Comparable to Brazil in 70s

11 HEALTH SYSTEMS Financing, Quality, Accessibility, and County Variations

12 Kenya spends about only 6.5% of its budget on health… Limited Public Commitment to Health Spending

13 13 Health sector continues to be predominantly financed by private sector sources (including by households’ out-of-pocket (OOP) spending); Public sector financing has remained constant over the last decade, at about 29 percent of THE; Donors contribution has more than doubled, from 16 percent in 2001/02 to 35 percent in 2009/10. Sources of Health Financing

14 Sarajevo, September 23, 2009

15 15 Proportion of health facilities offering Basic-Emergency Obstetric care

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18 Health System Global Best Practice Improving the availability of a skilled birth attendant closely connected with a capable and acceptable referral system (these include):  Making midwife backbone of the initiative (Sri Lanka and Malaysia)  Increasing availability of facilities that can provide basic and essential obstetric care.  Effectively using birthing centers/waiting homes (Honduras, Indonesia and Zimbabwe). Kenya is doing this with support from partners in the Coast and North East.  Reducing demand side barriers through free services (Malaysia and Sri Lanka) and recently announced by Kenya. This however requires close monitoring to ensure quality.  Reducing the cultural barriers - involvement of traditional birth attendants (Malaysia) to link with formal midwives.

19 Main Messages  One mother dies every two hours in Kenya  Most maternal and new born deaths are preventable and the interventions are well known which are not expensive  With the devolution, you are uniquely placed to address this persisting scrooge by implementing interventions that are relevant for your counties (marrying global knowledge with local response)  The partners gathered here are fully committed to collectively to support you


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