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Health system governance in Tanzania : impact on service delivery in the public sector

Mikkelsen-Lopez, Inez K.. Health system governance in Tanzania : impact on service delivery in the public sector. 2014, Doctoral Thesis, University of Basel, Faculty of Science.

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Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/diss/DissB_10879

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Abstract

Governance in the health system has perhaps been the least explored building block of the health system, receiving less attention due to its vague definition and complex nature. When discussed at the country level it often focuses on single elements such as corruption or accountability and doesn’t consider wider interactions of relevance to how policies are formed. How well governed a health system is can often mean the difference between the efficient use of resources and inefficient waste, which is even more important in a resource constrained environment.
The United Republic of Tanzania has been a major recipient of donor aid over the past few decades. Tanzania’s health sector in particular has been the subject of much donor interest, especially regarding medicines. One of the first donors to support medicines was Danida who funded the essential medicines kit, and since then numerous donors have been involved in either funding medicines, designing policies around medicines selection, procurement and distribution, or direct medicines donations. Although Tanzania has largely benefited from this increase in donor support, not all of it has been designed and implemented adequately to suit the situation and needs of Tanzania. In other words, health systems governance may sometimes have been weakened by donor-interest, resulting in reduced quality of health care.
The aim of this research was to contribute to a better understanding of health system governance and apply this knowledge to the Tanzanian health system. The insights gained should aid policy makers and other stakeholders to design interventions that are appropriate for the local context to ensure a stronger health system which is able to attain its goals of improving the level and distribution of health, while responding to the population’s needs and protecting them from large, often catastrophic financial expenditures.
The research was carried out as part of the Governance of Health Systems project, a collaborative endeavour between the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute and the Basel Institute of Governance. Quantitative and qualitative methods were applied to data collected in two areas of the local Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS), Ulanga District and Rufiji District. We used both primary data collection and secondary data, covering the period from 1999 – 2011.
The overall findings are that despite the interest over the past decade to develop frameworks to assess governance in the health system, few have been empirically applied. The first part of this thesis focuses on developing a framework to assess governance in the health system; the second part applies this framework to a selected governance issue in Tanzania, namely the delivery of essential medicines to public health centres in Tanzania. At the national level, this investigation found that the medicines ordering system was based on a complex paper-based system which had not been designed with local capacity in mind, nor did it improve the accountability of medicines. Lack of accountability was also found at the health facility level, where over half of respondents interviewed who sought care in the public sector for fever, subsequently experienced the consequences of one form or another of non-compliant health-worker behaviour (overcharging for treatment and medicines, stocking out of the first line antimalarial, dispensing an inappropriate monotherapy). This resulted in an additional cost to the patient, on average, of USD1.62 per treatment episode, representing 125% of the national per capita daily income, or 164% of the rural per capita daily income.
Stockouts of essential medicines are an immediate indicator of governance failure and in the case of fully funded donor medicines, stockouts represent a health system failure. This research identified that in a 15 month period from October 2011 until the end of 2012, an estimated 29% of health facilities were stocked out of the first line antimalarial at any one time. These stockouts were due to failures at the national and international level where excessive bureaucratic procedures resulted in fragmented and dysfunctional procedures for procurement of the first line antimalarial.
The findings in this thesis suggest that Tanzania should redesign the medicines ordering system, with greater participation from health workers, in order to better understand the challenges they face. We recommend various interventions across the health system to strengthen it and improve the availability of medicines. The most important recommendation would be to increase accountability and transparency of the medicines delivery system and force reconciliation between data sources thereby creating information on medicines consumed.
The findings of this thesis contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of governance in health systems and how overlooking governance can cause major catastrophic stockouts of essential medicines, in addition to a reduced level of service delivery and greater economic hardship for households.
Advisors:De Savigny, Don
Committee Members:Evans, David and Tanner, Marcel and Wyss, Kaspar
Faculties and Departments:09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) > Former Units within Swiss TPH > Health Systems and Policies (de Savigny)
UniBasel Contributors:Evans, David and Tanner, Marcel and Wyss, Kaspar
Item Type:Thesis
Thesis Subtype:Doctoral Thesis
Thesis no:10879
Thesis status:Complete
Number of Pages:157 S.
Language:English
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Last Modified:22 Apr 2018 04:31
Deposited On:08 Sep 2014 13:52

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