Bergen Nicole, Ruckert Arne, Kulkarni Manisha A, Abebe Lakew, Morankar Sudhakar, Labonté Ronald
1University of Ottawa, 600 Peter Morand Crescent, Ottawa, ON K1G 5Z3 Canada.
2Jimma University, PO Box 378, Jimma, Ethiopia.
Glob Health Res Policy. 2019 May 17;4:12. doi: 10.1186/s41256-019-0105-3. eCollection 2019.
Health equity is a cross-cutting theme in the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and a priority in health sector planning in countries including Ethiopia. Subnational health managers in Ethiopia are uniquely positioned to advance health equity, given the coordination, planning, budgetary, and administration tasks that they are assigned. Yet, the nature of efforts to advance health equity by subnational levels of the health sector is poorly understood and rarely researched. This study assesses how subnational health managers in Ethiopia understand health equity issues and their role in promoting health equity and offers insight into how these roles can be harnessed to advance health equity.
A descriptive case study assessed perspectives and experiences of health equity among subnational health managers at regional, zonal, district and Primary Health Care Unit administrative levels. Twelve in-depth interviews were conducted with directors, vice-directors, coordinators and technical experts. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis.
Subnational managers perceived geographical factors as a predominant concern in health service delivery inequities, especially when they intersected with poor infrastructure, patriarchal gender norms, unequal support from non-governmental organizations or challenging topography. Participants used ad hoc, context-specific strategies (such as resource-pooling with other sectors or groups and shaming-as-motivation) to improve health service delivery to remote populations and strengthen health system operations. Collaboration with other groups facilitated cost sharing and access to resources; however, the opportunities afforded by these collaborations, were not realized equally in all areas. Subnational health managers' efforts in promoting health equity are affected by inadequate resource availability, which restricts their ability to enact long-term and sustainable solutions.
Advancing health equity in Ethiopia requires: extra support to communities in hard-to-reach areas; addressing patriarchal norms; and strategic aligning of the subnational health system with non-health government sectors, community groups, and non-governmental organizations. The findings call attention to the unrealized potential of effectively coordinating governance actors and processes to better align national priorities and resources with subnational governance actions to achieve health equity, and offer potentially useful knowledge for subnational health system administrators working in conditions similar to those in our Ethiopian case study.
健康公平是联合国《2030年可持续发展议程》中的一个贯穿各领域的主题,也是包括埃塞俄比亚在内的各国卫生部门规划中的一个优先事项。鉴于埃塞俄比亚地方卫生管理人员所承担的协调、规划、预算和管理任务,他们在推动健康公平方面具有独特的地位。然而,人们对卫生部门地方层面推动健康公平的努力的性质了解甚少,相关研究也很少。本研究评估了埃塞俄比亚地方卫生管理人员如何理解健康公平问题以及他们在促进健康公平中的作用,并深入探讨了如何利用这些作用来推动健康公平。
一项描述性案例研究评估了区域、州、区和初级卫生保健单位行政层面的地方卫生管理人员对健康公平的看法和经验。对主任、副主任、协调员和技术专家进行了12次深入访谈。采用主题分析法对数据进行分析。
地方管理人员认为地理因素是卫生服务提供不平等的一个主要问题,特别是当地理因素与基础设施差、父权制性别规范、非政府组织支持不平等或地形复杂等因素交织在一起时。参与者采用临时的、因地制宜的策略(如与其他部门或群体集中资源以及以羞辱作为激励手段)来改善向偏远地区人群提供的卫生服务,并加强卫生系统的运作。与其他群体的合作促进了成本分担和资源获取;然而,这些合作带来的机会在所有地区并未得到平等实现。地方卫生管理人员在促进健康公平方面的努力受到资源不足的影响,这限制了他们制定长期和可持续解决方案的能力。
在埃塞俄比亚推动健康公平需要:为难以到达地区的社区提供额外支持;解决父权制规范问题;使地方卫生系统与非卫生政府部门、社区团体和非政府组织进行战略协调。研究结果提醒人们注意,有效协调治理行为体和流程以更好地使国家优先事项和资源与地方治理行动保持一致以实现健康公平的潜力尚未实现,并为在与我们埃塞俄比亚案例研究类似条件下工作的地方卫生系统管理人员提供了可能有用的知识。