Sidze Estelle M, Beekink Erik, Maina Beatrice W
African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) APHRC Campus, Manga Close Off Kirawa road, P.O. Box 10787-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
UNFPA Resource Flows Project, Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI), P.O. Box 11650, NL-2502 AR, The Hague, The Netherlands.
Reprod Health. 2015 May 5;12:39. doi: 10.1186/s12978-015-0033-8.
Universal access to reproductive health services entails strengthening health systems, but requires significant resource commitments as well as efficient and effective use of those resources. A number of international organizations and governments in developing countries are putting efforts into tracking the flow of health resources in order to inform resource mobilization and allocation, strategic planning, priority setting, advocacy and general policy making. The UNFPA/NIDI-led Resource Flows Project ("The UNFPA/NIDI RF Project") has conducted annual surveys since 1997 to monitor progress achieved by developing countries in implementing reproductive health financial targets. This commentary summarizes the Project experiences and challenges in gathering data on allocation of resources for reproductive health at the domestic level in sub-Saharan African countries. One key lesson learnt from the Project experience is the need for strengthening tracking mechanisms in sub-Saharan African countries and making information on reproductive health resources and expenditures available, in particular the private sector resources.
普及生殖健康服务需要加强卫生系统,但这需要大量资源投入,以及对这些资源进行高效和有效的利用。一些国际组织和发展中国家政府正在努力追踪卫生资源的流动情况,以便为资源筹集和分配、战略规划、确定优先事项、宣传和总体政策制定提供信息。由联合国人口基金/荷兰跨学科人口研究所牵头的资源流动项目(“联合国人口基金/荷兰跨学科人口研究所资源流动项目”)自1997年以来每年都进行调查,以监测发展中国家在实现生殖健康财政目标方面取得的进展。本评论总结了该项目在收集撒哈拉以南非洲国家国内生殖健康资源分配数据方面的经验和挑战。从该项目经验中学到的一个关键教训是,撒哈拉以南非洲国家需要加强追踪机制,并提供有关生殖健康资源和支出的信息,特别是私营部门资源的信息。