Institutional issues in targeted health interventions Hilary Standing Institute of Development Studies, UK.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE CHALLENGES & OPORTUNITIES OF ACCESS TO MEDICINES IN AFRICA Dr Pascoal MOCUMBI, orig Mozambique,High Representative EDCTP ABRASCO/WFPHA.
Advertisements

DECENTRALIZATION AND FINANCING OF SERVICES Gordana Matković Sofia, July 2007.
NGO (and private) service providers - Projectisation versus outsourcing Sofia Consultations, July 2007 Working Group 3: Family Support Services.
What are key underlying principles and accepted strategic approaches for addressing monitoring discrimination? Partnership Participation Child rights approach.
Regional Water and sanitation workshop Purpose to exchange of experience between colleagues dealing with water and sanitation programmes / projects on.
Asia and the Pacific Rural enterprises and poverty reduction.
Universal Coverage – Can we guarantee health for all? 3 – 4 October 2011, Kuala Lumpur Nossal perspective.
Where Do We Go from Here? Entry Points for Action Tom Merrick, World Bank Institute.
Health Systems and Actors Tom Merrick, World Bank.
European Microfinance Network 4th Annual Conference Microfinance in a Banking Environment Models, Experiences, the Way Forward "Research in European Microfinance”
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Di McIntyre Chair, AfHEA Scientific.
International Conference on Small States and Economic Resilience April 2007 Valetta, Malta Islands and Small States Institute Government intervention.
Towards the Romania of PRINCIPLES OF PROGRAMMING The social and macroeconomic policy of Europe is the policy of Romania EU projects represent a.
Department for International Development Payment by Results.
FROM CRISIS RESPONSE TO INCLUSIVE GROWTH By Chada Koketso.
Introduction.  The objective is to ensure that the beneficial impact of the project continues after the project has finished.
A critical Overview on Right to Information and Poverty Impact Presentation includes: ► Conceptualizing RTI as a development tool ► Linkage between RTI.
NGO Social Enterprise. – an international development organisation iDE develops enterprises and market systems that deliver sustainable social and economic.
IPDET Lunch Presentation Series Equity-focused evaluation: Opportunities and challenges Michael Bamberger June 27,
IID Policy Environment in Thailand Nipawan Thirawat, Ph.D. Dolchai La-ornual, Ph.D. Mahidol University.
Country Ownership for Reproductive Health; An NGO perspectiveSLIDE 1 “ACCESS FOR ALL: SUPPLYING A NEW DECADE FOR REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH ” Country Ownership.
AusAID’s approach to health in developing countries
EC Reference Document: Social Transfers in the Fight Against Hunger Nicholas Freeland Cécile Cherrier.
EPWP - Innovations EPWP Strategy Summit Dept of Public Works 28 November 2014 Dr. Miriam Altman Commissioner: National Planning Commission
 Tools for Mainstreaming Gender Issues in Transport Projects  Thursday, March 18, 2010  12: pm.
Health financing models. NHS Systems Strengths –Pools risks for whole population –Relies on many different revenue sources –Single centralized governance.
STRENGTHENING HEALTH SYSTEMS Anne Mills DCPP Editor London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Elmostafa AITAMOR Beirut, November 2009
MRosenmöller– Health Financing & Fiscal Sustainability European Experience with Health Insurance and Challenges for the Future Workshop.
Water Safety Plans | November 2010 Household and small community water safety Kuching 2 November 2010 Bruce Gordon Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Health.
1 From Disseminating Knowledge to Promoting Innovation: Challenges in reforming agricultural extension Rasheed Sulaiman V Centre for Research on Innovation.
All over the world, the government of each country is very much pledge bound to ensure basic facilities to meet its constitutional obligation Bangladesh.
Identify the institutions which have a stake in the
PROTECTING THE POOR AGAINST HEALTH SHOCKS Gerald Bloom and Henry Lucas Institute of Development Studies Meeting the needs of the very poorest in service.
PREVENTION, PROTECTION, PROMOTION THE WORLD BANK’S EVOLVING FRAMEWORK OF SOCIAL PROTECTION IN AFRICA MILAN VODOPIVEC WORLD BANK Prepared for the conference.
DFID’s aid policy and instruments (the orchestrated version) Nel Druce HLSP/DFID.
Click to add title Policies to support local energy systems: do they go far enough? Jim Watson, Research Director UK Energy Research Centre EG&S KTN Annual.
Nouria Brikci Health economist/ health policy specialist Governance and Health March 2014.
PADI Action Agenda for China(draft) History of Poverty Reduction in China History of Monitoring & Evaluation in Poverty Reduction Objectives.
3 August 2004 Public Health Practice III: FINANCING PUBLIC HEALTH REFORM Thomas E. Novotny MD MPH University of California San Francisco Institute for.
Performances Based Financing scheme in Rwanda INVESTING MORE STRATEGICALLY 1.
Development with Disabled Network Mainstreaming Disability into Community Governance System Asitha Weweldeniya, Weweldenige, Development with Disabled.
Defending dignity. Fighting poverty. Governance and Service Delivery.
Achieving the SDGs Social Protection for Rural Poverty Reduction Rob Vos Director Social Protection Division and Coordinator Rural Poverty Reduction SPIAC-B,
A Framework to discuss Social Assistance for Health Care Bruno Meessen, ITM International Workshop Health Care and Poverty, Solutions Ahead?
April_2010 Partnering initiatives at country level Proposed partnering process to build a national stop tuberculosis (TB) partnership.
Community-Driven Development: An Overview of Practice Community Development Strategies – how to prioritize, sequence and implement programs CommDev Workshop.
Donor Coordination Forum 16 October, key challenges Poverty Social exclusion Functional gaps and system weaknesses in social services.
Vision and Goal Vision Option -1 = 6 Option-2=4 Goal Vision -1= 10.
ppt Partnership skills Knowledge Professional skills Personal skills and attitude.
Overview of targeting in Sub- Saharan Africa - the ongoing debate in the region Cash Transfers Workshop 21 st September 2010.
PRESENTATION TO PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON WATER AFFAIRS AND FORESTRY Cindy Damons 28 May 2008 The role of municipalities in managing and giving effect to.
ELEMENTS OF STRATEGY FOR ACHIEVING SOCIAL PROTECTION FLOOR Global Network, Cape Town 7 December 2012 BY AFRICAN LABOUR RESEARCH NETWORK (ALRN)
Global Partnership for Enhanced Social Accountability (GPESA) December 19, 2011 World Bank.
Overview of Health Systems Constraints in Developing Countries David Peters November 30, 2005.
Public Policy towards Public- Private Collaboration in Strengthening Health Systems World Bank Commitments and Challenges Donor Forum Paris, May
International Land Coalition Advancing the Monitoring of Land Governance for Ensuring Impact on Poverty Reduction Annalisa Mauro.
Public versus Private Provision of Public Services Philip Gray PSAS Presentation to Poverty Day October 17 th 2002.
2nd African Decent Work Symposium: Yaoundé, Cameroon, 6-8 October THE SOCIAL SECURITY EXTENSION CHALLENGE: INCOME SECURITY AND HEALTH BENEFITS. Dr.
Key Challenges in extending social security. Social Security: key Challenges   Social Security as a human right? Or is it individual responsibility?
Cornelia Govani / IBMMarch 2010 Chaitanya 1 Resource NGOs and Field NGOs : Roles, Responsibilities and Participation Strategies CAIM Start Up Workshop.
Health Care Financing Health Economic Course Series
The countries we work in Latin America
REACH Mission & Objectives
Albanian VET Strategy and Action Plan for the period
Ghazala Mansuri and Vijayendra Rao, DECRG
The Role of Bilateral Donors in supporting capacity-building in the area of ICT Open Consultations on Financing Mechanisms for Meeting the Challenges.
Rural Partnerships between Small Farmers and Private Sector
Report on the funding situation of EAPN National Networks
UN support to Social Inclusion in Albania
Presentation transcript:

Institutional issues in targeted health interventions Hilary Standing Institute of Development Studies, UK

Key findings and questions  Importance of interventions that target the non-health costs of improving access for the very poor  Pivotal role of NGOs in providing institutional capacity often lacking in the public sector  Importance of attention to the supply side  Challenges in scaling up

Meeting the broader needs of the very poor Seem to work best when part of broader measures to address context of very poor people’s lives:  Broader measures against social and economic vulnerabilities  Transport and lost income - often a larger burden than fees for curative services and medicines.  Social obstacles, such as stigma, shame and lack of voice  Making health care accessible to the poorest requires institutional mechanisms which can minimise these costs and obstacles

Institutional role of non-state actors Do targeted programmes work best where there is reasonable state infrastructure, e.g. in MICs?  In LICs, importance of institutional actors and programmes that can “fill the gap” such as established poverty reduction programmes, large NGO capacity  Experience of beneficiary identification and targeting

Supply side challenges  Demand side social sector interventions generally more successful at increasing coverage than increasing quality  Programmes often introduced in settings where service quality is low, need for reform to supply side services especially initiatives are introduced in a monopoly- provider situation  Issue of incentives to create more responsive services

Governance challenges Schemes often over-administered but under- governed  Capable monitoring and governance bodies needed at both national and local level, to play informed and empowered advocacy/watch-dog role  Development of competent third-party purchasing organisations where beneficiaries are at informational disadvantages in evaluating which service they require/where best to access it  Quality-assurance standards agencies that can certify providers able to supply services to certain standards

Scaling-up challenges Targeted programmes often small-scale, generously funded, not sustainable  Programmes for reaching the poorest often rely on local knowledge, harder to transpose to large scale  Risks of elite capture of decentralised resource flows where allocation to localities is decided centrally, but dispersal is determined locally  Benefits of more simple rules, using existing infrastructure and experience