<div class="title-block" style="border-bottom-color: #628bb3"><h1><img class="title-image" src="https://www.heart-resources.org/wp-content/themes/heart/images/health.svg">Access to medicines</h1><div class="post-type-description"></div></div> – HEART https://www.heart-resources.org High-quality technical assistance for results Thu, 18 Jul 2019 14:18:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.6.10 Improving health system resilience in fragile and conflict-affected countries https://www.heart-resources.org/mmedia/improving-health-system-resilience-in-fragile-and-conflict-affected-countries/ Thu, 18 Jul 2019 13:30:20 +0000 https://www.heart-resources.org/?post_type=mmedia&p=31786 Read more]]> According to the World Bank, fragility, conflict, and violence is a critical development challenge that threatens efforts to end extreme poverty, affecting both low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Many of the world’s crises are caused by or exacerbated by fragility, from violent conflict to internal and external displacements and climate shocks.

Compared to other LMICs, fragile states have grown more slowly, with more than 80% being off track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Increased global conflict and fragility means that the health of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable populations are at risk. By 2030, an estimated 80% of the world’s extreme poor will live in these places.

It is increasingly important to ensure health systems worldwide are resilient to shocks, so that health actors, institutions, and populations have capacity to:

  • adequately prepare for and effectively respond to crises
  • maintain core functions during crisis
  • take informed action based on lessons learned from previous crises
  • reorganise in the aftermath

In the following video, Oxford Policy Management health consultant Kailash Balendran explores the connections between fragile states and resilient health systems, looks at how to improve engagement in this area, and spotlights what OPM’s Health team is doing to support governments in fragile countries to improve their health systems.

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How can countries get the most out of their investments in health? https://www.heart-resources.org/mmedia/how-can-countries-get-the-most-out-of-their-investments-in-health/ Thu, 18 Jul 2019 13:25:10 +0000 https://www.heart-resources.org/?post_type=mmedia&p=31783 Read more]]> The ability of countries to provide available, affordable, and high quality healthcare services to their populations has become a global priority. However, at least half of the population around the world still don’t have access to essential healthcare, and around 100 million people are pushed into extreme poverty because they have to pay for healthcare.

Universal health coverage (UHC) enables all individuals to receive health services they require, without suffering financial hardship. While there are many ways to achieve UHC, all require sufficient funding from governments.

In the following video, senior health consultant Odd Hanssen discusses initiatives countries can implement to both mobilise more resources for health (more money for health), as well as get as much out of their spending on health (more health for the money), towards achieving universal health coverage.

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Exploring the importance of effective supply chain management in health https://www.heart-resources.org/mmedia/exploring-the-importance-of-effective-supply-chain-management-in-health/ Tue, 16 Jul 2019 15:44:19 +0000 https://www.heart-resources.org/?post_type=mmedia&p=31770 Read more]]> Vimal Kumar, principal consultant in the Oxford Policy Management Health team, discusses the importance of procurement and supply chain management in supporting effective policy reforms.

Ensuring availability, affordability, and quality of commodities (for example medicines) to provide services to the patients is one of the key outcomes which procurement and supply chain management establishes.

This is especially important in low- and middle-income countries, where poor populations often experience out-of-pocket payments and financial hardship for accessing healthcare.

Improving efficiency and effectiveness of procurement and supply chain management systems can help ensure sustainable availability of quality and affordable health commodities for the vulnerable communities.

In December 2018, Vimal Kumar, an expert in health procurement and supply chain management, led a technical seminar around health supply chain management where he talked about his experience in the field.

Developing a sustainable pro-poor health commodity supply is an integral part of developing high-quality and affordable healthcare services for all, which is an important goal for the Health team at Oxford Policy Management.

Helping to strengthen the procurement and supply chain management components, the team’s work in the field included the monitoring, learning, and evaluation of the Bihar Technical Support Programme (BTSP), which focused on improving reproductive, maternal, and child health and nutrition in Bihar, India, in addition to work for HEART.

 

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Blood Costs in Zimbabwe https://www.heart-resources.org/2018/01/blood-costs-zimbabwe/ Tue, 02 Jan 2018 10:19:07 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?p=30874 Read more]]> There is lack of published data on the costs of blood and blood transfusion in sub-Saharan Africa (Mafirakureva et al., 2016). Experts consulted for this rapid review confirm that the deficiency in the breakdown of components involved in costs hinders fair comparative analysis with different countries.

Although the focus for this rapid review is on costs associated with blood transfusion, an overall understanding of the costs (and the processes driving the costs) for all blood products (such as whole blood, and platelets or red blood cells, RBCs) is included.

A blood transfusion is a common medical treatment around the world. However, in many African countries, patients are often charged a high price or go without. In some countries, this is because people do not donate enough blood to meet the national need (GPJ Africa, 2017).

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Benefits of Investing in Family Planning https://www.heart-resources.org/2017/10/benefits-investing-family-planning/ Wed, 18 Oct 2017 10:45:27 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?p=30843 Read more]]> This report focuses on the evidence on the health, economic and other benefits of investing in family planning. Family planning allows people to attain their desired number of children and determine the spacing of pregnancies. It is achieved through use of contraceptive methods and the treatment of infertility (WHO 2015). A large and growing body of literature explores the social and economic benefits of women’s ability to use reliable contraception to plan whether and when to have children (Sonfield et al 2013). Compared to other interventions, investments in family planning have been shown to be highly cost effective. It is inexpensive and the return on investment is high. Family planning interventions have powerful poverty reduction effects in addition to providing health and human rights benefits (Bongaarts and Sinding 2011).

Cleland et al (2006) explains that the promotion of family planning in countries with high birth rates has the potential to reduce poverty and hunger and prevent 32% of all maternal deaths and nearly 10% of childhood deaths. It would also substantially contribute to the empowerment of women, achievement of universal primary schooling, and long-term environmental sustainability. Over the last 40 years, family planning programmes have played a key part in raising the prevalence of contraceptive practice from less than 10% to 60% and reducing fertility in developing countries from six to about three births per woman. However, in half of the 75 larger
low-income and lower-middle income countries (mainly in Africa), contraceptive practice remains low and fertility, population growth, and unmet need for family planning are high (Cleland et al 2006).

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Women and girls with disabilities in conflict and crises https://www.heart-resources.org/2017/09/women-and-girls-with-disabilities-in-conflict-and-crises/ Fri, 08 Sep 2017 15:12:47 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?p=30802 Read more]]> People with disabilities have been found to ‘form one of the most socially excluded groups in any displaced or conflict-affected community’ (Pearce et al, 2016: 119). They may have difficulty accessing humanitarian assistance programmes, due to a variety of societal, attitudinal, environmental and communication barriers, and are at greater risk of violence than their non-disabled peers (Pearce, 2014: 4).

Women and girls with disabilities are ‘particularly vulnerable to discrimination, exploitation and violence, including gender-based violence (GBV), but they may have difficulty accessing support and services that could reduce their risk and vulnerability (Pearce, 2014: 4). This rapid review looks at the available evidence on the risks and vulnerabilities faces by women and girls with disabilities in conflict and crises and interventions to support them.

Most of the literature uncovered by this rapid review was grey literature published by organisations working with refugees, rather than peer reviewed articles. The bulk of the evidence was based on work carried out by Women’s Refugee Commission (WRC) and their partners.

Dowling (2016: 5) suggests the experiences of disabled refugees in relation to gender and age is a gap in the evidence about which more should be done. Pearce et al (2016: 119) also find that ‘there is a distinct gap in research on the intersection between and among age, gender, and disability in humanitarian contexts’. Field research on violence against women and girls with disabilities or their lived experiences, unique risks, and their specific needs and capacities, in humanitarian settings is still very limited (Pearce et al, 2016: 120). Sherwood and Pearce (2016:5) note that ‘rigorous peer-reviewed research on the inclusion of women and girls with disabilities
in humanitarian action remains limited’, although there is a ‘growing body of literature including organizational assessments and reports, and UN agency and government policies and strategies, that recognizes that women and girls with disabilities face additional risks in humanitarian crisis, and calls for their participation in humanitarian programme design, implementation, and monitoring’.

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Role of the private sector in production and distribution of long lasting insecticide treated nets for malaria control https://www.heart-resources.org/2017/09/role-private-sector-production-distribution-long-lasting-insecticide-treated-nets-malaria-control/ Tue, 05 Sep 2017 07:50:04 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?p=30787 Read more]]> This report provides a review of key literature and evidence on the LLINs and private sector. The evidence base for this report is vast and spans more than twenty years of research evidence, policy documents and implementation programme evaluations and data from sub Saharan Africa and Asia. The relevant literature spans academic publications in biological and social sciences as well as implementation science and health economics.

The private sector producing and distributing mosquito nets in malaria control has been exposed to factors beyond usual market influences. The supply of untreated nets was diverse and often local. It was maintained with the introduction of insecticide treatment sachets (supplied by donors) to bundle with untreated nets sold by retailers. Voucher schemes aimed at targeting vulnerable groups e.g. pregnant women and young children aimed to sustain and expand the commercial sector through public private partnership.

The biggest influences on the private sector was a huge increase in donor funding of free mass campaigns and the WHO and the Global Malaria Programme change in 2007 in the overall global strategy from targeted protection of vulnerable groups (pregnant women and children under 5 years old) to universal coverage and recommendation of long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) instead of insecticide treated nets (ITNs). The private sector then had to compete with international companies with the technology to produce LLINs; bulk purchasing by donors; higher unit costs; and competition with free distribution by donors through the established network of the healthcare system.

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Evidence and experience of procurement in health sector decentralisation https://www.heart-resources.org/2017/07/evidence-experience-procurement-health-sector-decentralisation/ Thu, 13 Jul 2017 08:37:46 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?p=30753 Read more]]> Improving the efficiency, effectiveness, equity and responsiveness of supply chains and procurement processes for pharmaceuticals, vaccines and other health products, which make up a large share of total health expenditure in low and middle-income countries (LMICs), has important implications for health system performance and population health. Decentralised governance of health services provides greater autonomy in planning, management and decision making from national to sub-national level and has occurred in many LMICs largely as a response to the primary healthcare approach promoted by international agencies. Evidence suggests that procurement is more efficient when centralised because of economies of scale and improved purchasing power whilst other health system functions such as financing and planning/budgeting benefit more from local context-specific implementation. Nepal is embarking on a process of decentralisation after adopting a federal approach to local governance. This helpdesk report looks at other countries to summarise key findings and lessons learnt from decentralised procurement. ]]> Urban Health https://www.heart-resources.org/mmedia/urban-health/ Tue, 29 Nov 2016 14:54:39 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?post_type=mmedia&p=29705 Read more]]> Dr Helen Elsey is from the Nuffield Centre for International Health and Development, University of Leeds. In this HEART Talks she talks through the urban health HEART reading packs that she has put together with Dr Siddharth Agarwal from the Urban Health Resource Centre in India. The three reading packs are: A) Data and evidence, B) Improving population health – strategies for inter-sectoral action, and C) Interventions and pro-poor service provision.

Urbanisation
The world is urbanising. Globally, more people live in urban areas than in rural areas. By 2050, it is expected that 66% of the world’s population will be urbanites. Africa and Asia are urbanising the fastest. By 2050 56% will be urban in Africa and 64% in Asia. There are currently 28 mega-cities (i.e. with a population of 10 million or more). By 2030, the world is projected to have 41 mega-cities. However, the fastest growing urban areas are medium-sized cities and those with less than 1 million inhabitants located in Asia and Africa. UN-Habitat estimates the number of people living in slum conditions is now 863 million; growing from 760 million in 2000 and 650 million in 1990. Cities are at the forefront of ‘disease transition’ with malnutrition and obesity occurring simultaneously. Water and sanitation provision is grossly inadequate in urban slums. Tobacco consumption is a major concern among urban poor men, and increasingly women; a risk factor for both NCDs and TB. There are multi-sector influences on urban health.

Coordination
Local governments are key to coordinating inter-sectoral action. Donors are increasingly working with local government to strengthen capacity to plan, manage services, link with sector ministries, enforce public health legislation and establish local level governance structures.

There is a need to coordinate health services between local government and health ministries. The urban public health service is woefully inadequate. There has been underinvestment due to years of the perceived ‘urban advantage’. Responsibilities for staff, their training, equipment/drugs, and facilities often fall between the Ministry of Health (MOH) and the Municipality. The poor are left with little option but to use meagre resources on private facilities resulting in high levels of catastrophic health expenditure. There are poor referral mechanisms due to the plethora of NGO and private providers. There is a need for monitoring and enforcement of quality standards among providers and pharmacies. Secondary care is insufficient with maternity hospitals not open all hours and weak services. Tertiary hospitals are overloaded and not easy to access for the poor.

Public Private Partnerships (PPPs)
There are challenges with different forms of PPPs, private for-profit and not-for profit forms. For-profit PPPs have no incentive to reach out to the urban poor. They are not keen to partner for outreach care which is the key to preventative healthcare and the most crucial for urban deprived communities. Non-profit agencies tend to have few resources. Bangladesh’s Urban Primary Healthcare Programme uses partnerships with NGOs, private clinics and government health centres to expand services to slum and vulnerable communities. There are still challenges with monitoring, quality, and referrals between providers which covered in some detail by in the reading packs.

Health promotion
Helping people remain healthy and not in need of health services is a fundamental goal of any urban health strategy. There is a lack of evidence on which health promotion approaches are likely to be effective in changing ‘lifestyle behaviours’ such as tobacco use, diet, and exercise among the urban poor. Encouraging waist measurement, desired diet, physical activity and mental wellbeing at community level; peer education approaches to nutrition, physical activity, and promoting optimal behaviours in schools have shown some success. Community healthworkers (CHWs) have been effective at changing behaviours in Bangladesh, India, and Ethiopia. CHW and slum women’s groups promoting peer-to-peer health promotion shows promise. Mass media through mobile phones, print, radio and television have wide audience reach in urban centres, but it is hard to compete in the cluttered media environment. Instant messaging for skilled birth attendants is more effective in urban areas. There has been increases in zinc treatment awareness following TV, radio, and newspaper media campaign in urban areas.

Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
WASH needs to be promoted in households and schools to improve, health, nutrition and education. The three interventions of the WASH sector (hand-washing, food storage, garbage disposal) – depend on one another for full realisation of their benefits. For example most sanitation systems cannot function without water. School WASH impacts education outcomes, especially for girls. Menstrual hygiene and girl friendly toilets in schools affect school attendance of girls and reproductive tract infections. Hand-washing with soap and water and other personal hygiene practices have the potential to substantially reduce within household transmission of diarrhoea and improve nutrition. Promoting practices such as hand-washing with soap and water, and safe disposal of child faeces benefit health and nutrition and can be incorporated in a wide range of public health strategies at low cost.

Participatory neighbourhood mapping
Participatory mapping has been used in India to expand the reach of urban services. Slum women’s groups use hand drawn maps to ensure that no family is left out from municipal/NGO lists used for housing, sewage systems, toilets, and entitlements. They are also used to track access to health services eg. immunisation, antenatal care,  and delivery. The maps help identify recent migrants for linkage to services and entitlements. Gentle negotiation is occurring through collective petitions. Inclusive urbanisation requires disadvantaged communities to actively participate in governance.

Healthy places
Pressure from real estate developers, poor governance and corruption undermines local government’s role in controlling urban development to keep healthy places within the city. Access to green spaces reduces mental illness and has been shown to reduce inequities in cardio vascular disease and all-cause mortality in high income countries. Green spaces are rarely considered in controlled and uncontrolled expansion of urban areas. Urban agriculture can make an important contribution to household food security, especially in times of food crisis or food shortages. This needs support and regulation so food is grown in healthy environments.

Health and safe places for children
Urban poor women are more likely to work outside the home than other women in urban or rural settings. Working outside the home provides opportunities to improve income and increase self-esteem and gender equity. However, there is a lack of childcare and supervision for children. This could be solved with early childhood development opportunities. An NGO mobile crèche run day care centres in partnership with government’s National Creche scheme and with support funding agencies in India. Day care centres operate in coordination with builders and contractors near construction sites.

Transport and communications
10 billion trips are made every day in urban centres around the world. An increasing proportion of urban trips are using high carbon and energy-intensive private motorised vehicles. The urban poorest are disproportionately affected by key negative externalities generated by transport, including road accidents, air pollution and displacement when transport developments are occuring. Regulation to improve road safety can make a substantial difference to accidents. For example regulation of ‘matatus’ (mini-buses) in Kenya was introduced where drivers had to increase their driving and safety skills. This legislation resulted in a 73% reduction in accidents. Keeping cities compact, with opportunities for walking, cycling and public transport reduces emissions and support public health.

All of these issues and more are covered in the reading packs which point out key resources.

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Comparative advantages and disadvantages of “push” and “pull” mechanisms in pharmaceutical management https://www.heart-resources.org/2016/06/comparative-advantages-disadvantages-push-pull-mechanisms-pharmaceutical-management/ Tue, 28 Jun 2016 12:26:52 +0000 http://www.heart-resources.org/?p=29223 Read more]]> In pharmaceutical management, distribution schemes for medicines can be defined as “push” or “pull” systems. In a pull system, each level of the system determines the types and quantities of medicines needed and place orders with the supply source. In a push system, supply sources determine the types and quantities of medicines to be delivered to lower levels. This helpdesk report examines the advantages and disadvantages of these “push” and “pull” mechanisms. Advantages of pull systems include that they are responsive to health facilities’ medication requirements, so there is more flexibility in selecting medicines for specific health problems in particular regions or types of health units. Their flexibility can result in less shortages or surpluses of items and less wastage caused by expiry of medications. Push systems are less flexible and responsive but they can be useful in particular situations. They can provide essential medicines with a simplified system of budgeting, procurement, storage, transport and supply management. They are widely used in disaster relief. Some countries use push systems for routine supply of essential medicines to rural health facilities. This report includes case studies of countries in transition from “push” to “pull” systems; countries that use a mix of “push” and “pull” mechanisms and examples of other approaches such as “top-up” or informed push systems. ]]>