Rodríguez Daniela C, Banda Hastings, Namakhoma Ireen
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore MD, USA and
Replace with Research on Equity and Community Health Trust, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Health Policy Plan. 2015 Dec;30 Suppl 2:ii74-ii83. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czv063.
In 2007, Malawi became an early adopter of integrated community case management for childhood illnesses (iCCM), a policy aimed at community-level treatment for malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia for children below 5 years. Through a retrospective case study, this article explores critical issues in implementation that arose during policy formulation through the lens of the innovation (i.e. iCCM) and of the institutions involved in the policy process. Data analysis is founded on a documentary review and 21 in-depth stakeholder interviews across institutions in Malawi. Findings indicate that the characteristics of iCCM made it a suitable policy to address persistent challenges in child mortality, namely that ill children were not interacting with health workers on a timely basis and consequently were dying in their communities. Further, iCCM was compatible with the Malawian health system due to the ability to build on an existing community health worker cadre of health surveillance assistants (HSAs) and previous experiences with treatment provision at the community level. In terms of institutions, the Ministry of Health (MoH) demonstrated leadership in the overall policy process despite early challenges of co-ordination within the MoH. WHO, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and implementing organizations played a supportive role in their position as knowledge brokers. Greater challenges were faced in the organizational capacity of the MoH. Regulatory issues around HSA training as well as concerns around supervision and overburdening of HSAs were discussed, though not fully addressed during policy development. Similarly, the financial sustainability of iCCM, including the mechanisms for channelling funding flows, also remains an unresolved issue. This analysis highlights the role of implementation questions during policy development. Despite several outstanding concerns, the compatibility between iCCM as a policy alternative and the local context laid the foundation for Malawi's road to early adoption of iCCM.
2007年,马拉维成为儿童疾病综合社区病例管理(iCCM)的早期采用者,这一政策旨在对5岁以下儿童的疟疾、腹泻和肺炎进行社区层面的治疗。通过一项回顾性案例研究,本文从创新(即iCCM)以及参与政策过程的机构的角度,探讨了政策制定过程中出现的关键实施问题。数据分析基于文献综述以及对马拉维各机构21名利益相关者的深入访谈。研究结果表明,iCCM的特点使其成为应对儿童死亡率持续挑战的合适政策,即患病儿童未能及时与卫生工作者接触,因此在社区中死亡。此外,iCCM与马拉维卫生系统兼容,因为它能够依托现有的社区卫生工作者队伍——健康监测助理(HSAs),以及此前在社区层面提供治疗的经验。在机构方面,卫生部(MoH)在总体政策过程中发挥了领导作用,尽管卫生部内部早期存在协调方面的挑战。世界卫生组织(WHO)、联合国儿童基金会(UNICEF)和实施组织作为知识传播者发挥了支持作用。卫生部在组织能力方面面临更大挑战。讨论了围绕健康监测助理培训的监管问题以及对健康监测助理的监督和负担过重的担忧,不过在政策制定过程中这些问题并未得到充分解决。同样,iCCM的财务可持续性,包括资金流动渠道机制,仍然是一个未解决的问题。这一分析突出了政策制定过程中实施问题的作用。尽管存在一些悬而未决的问题,但iCCM作为一种政策选择与当地情况的兼容性为马拉维早日采用iCCM奠定了基础。