Ministry of Health, Mozambique, National Malaria Control Program, Eduardo Mondlane Avenue, Maputo 1008, Mozambique.
Hum Resour Health. 2013 Jun 14;11:26. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-11-26.
In the rapid scale-up of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) treatment, many donors have chosen to channel their funds to non-governmental organizations and other private partners rather than public sector systems. This approach has reinforced a private sector, vertical approach to addressing the HIV epidemic. As progress on stemming the epidemic has stalled in some areas, there is a growing recognition that overall health system strengthening, including health workforce development, will be essential to meet AIDS treatment goals. Mozambique has experienced an especially dramatic increase in disease-specific support over the last eight years. We explored the perspectives and experiences of key Mozambican public sector health managers who coordinate, implement, and manage the myriad donor-driven projects and agencies.
Over a four-month period, we conducted 41 individual qualitative interviews with key Ministry workers at three levels in the Mozambique national health system, using open-ended semi-structured interview guides. We also reviewed planning documents.
All respondents emphasized the value and importance of international aid and vertical funding to the health sector and each highlighted program successes that were made possible by recent increased aid flows. However, three serious concerns emerged: 1) difficulties coordinating external resources and challenges to local control over the use of resources channeled to international private organizations; 2) inequalities created within the health system produced by vertical funds channeled to specific services while other sectors remain under-resourced; and 3) the exodus of health workers from the public sector health system provoked by large disparities in salaries and work.
The Ministry of Health attempted to coordinate aid by implementing a "sector-wide approach" to bring the partners together in setting priorities, harmonizing planning, and coordinating support. Only 14% of overall health sector funding was channeled through this coordinating process by 2008, however. The vertical approach starved the Ministry of support for its administrative functions. The exodus of health workers from the public sector to international and private organizations emerged as the issue of greatest concern to the managers and health workers interviewed. Few studies have addressed the growing phenomenon of "internal brain drain" in Africa which proved to be of greater concern to Mozambique's health managers.
在迅速扩大艾滋病毒(HIV)护理和艾滋病治疗规模的过程中,许多捐助者选择将资金提供给非政府组织和其他私人合作伙伴,而不是公共部门系统。这种方法强化了私营部门解决艾滋病毒流行的垂直方法。由于某些地区遏制该流行病的进展已经停滞不前,人们越来越认识到,加强整个卫生系统,包括卫生人力开发,对于实现艾滋病治疗目标至关重要。莫桑比克在过去八年中经历了疾病特定支持的特别急剧增加。我们探讨了协调、实施和管理众多由捐助者驱动的项目和机构的莫桑比克公共部门卫生管理人员的观点和经验。
在四个月的时间里,我们对莫桑比克国家卫生系统三个层面的卫生部工作人员进行了 41 次个别定性访谈,使用开放式半结构式访谈指南。我们还审查了规划文件。
所有受访者都强调了国际援助和垂直供资对卫生部门的价值和重要性,并强调了最近增加援助流量使一些方案取得成功。然而,出现了三个严重关切问题:1)协调外部资源的困难以及对资源的地方控制的挑战,这些资源被输送给国际私营组织;2)由于向特定服务提供垂直资金而在卫生系统内造成的不平等,而其他部门仍然资源不足;3)由于工资和工作之间存在巨大差距,卫生工作者从公共部门卫生系统外流。
卫生部试图通过实施“全部门办法”来协调援助,将合作伙伴聚集在一起,确定优先事项、协调规划和协调支持。然而,到 2008 年,只有 14%的卫生部门总资金通过这一协调过程提供。垂直方法使卫生部缺乏支持其行政职能的资金。卫生工作者从公共部门外流到国际和私人组织,这成为接受采访的管理人员和卫生工作者最关注的问题。很少有研究涉及非洲日益严重的“内部人才流失”现象,这对莫桑比克的卫生管理人员来说是一个更大的问题。