Ratcliffe Hannah L, Schwarz Dan, Hirschhorn Lisa R, Cejas Cintia, Diallo Abdoulaye, Garcia-Elorrio Ezequiel, Fifield Jocelyn, Gashumba Diane, Hartshorn Lucy, Leydon Nicholas, Mohamed Mohamed, Nakamura Yoriko, Ndiaye Youssoupha, Novignon Jacob, Ofosu Anthony, Roder-DeWan Sanam, Rwiyereka Angelique, Secci Federica, Veillard Jeremy H, Bitton Asaf
Ariadne Labs, Brigham and Women's Hospital & Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
BMJ Glob Health. 2019 Sep 13;4(5):e001822. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001822. eCollection 2019.
High-performing primary health care (PHC) is essential for achieving universal health coverage. However, in many countries, PHC is weak and unable to deliver on its potential. Improvement is often limited by a lack of actionable data to inform policies and set priorities. To address this gap, the Primary Health Care Performance Initiative (PHCPI) was formed to strengthen measurement of PHC in low-income and middle-income countries in order to accelerate improvement. PHCPI's Vital Signs Profile was designed to provide a comprehensive snapshot of the performance of a country's PHC system, yet quantitative information about PHC systems' capacity to deliver high-quality, effective care was limited by the scarcity of existing data sources and metrics. To systematically measure the capacity of PHC systems, PHCPI developed the PHC Progression Model, a rubric-based mixed-methods assessment tool. The PHC Progression Model is completed through a participatory process by in-country teams and subsequently reviewed by PHCPI to validate results and ensure consistency across countries. In 2018, PHCPI partnered with five countries to pilot the tool and found that it was feasible to implement with fidelity, produced valid results, and was highly acceptable and useful to stakeholders. Pilot results showed that both the participatory assessment process and resulting findings yielded novel and actionable insights into PHC strengths and weaknesses. Based on these positive early results, PHCPI will support expansion of the PHC Progression Model to additional countries to systematically and comprehensively measure PHC system capacity in order to identify and prioritise targeted improvement efforts.
高效的初级卫生保健对于实现全民健康覆盖至关重要。然而,在许多国家,初级卫生保健较为薄弱,无法充分发挥其潜力。改善工作往往受到缺乏可用于为政策提供依据和确定优先事项的可操作数据的限制。为了填补这一空白,成立了初级卫生保健绩效倡议组织(PHCPI),以加强对低收入和中等收入国家初级卫生保健的衡量,从而加速改善工作。PHCPI的《关键指标概况》旨在全面呈现一个国家初级卫生保健系统的绩效情况,但由于现有数据源和指标匮乏,关于初级卫生保健系统提供高质量、有效护理能力的定量信息有限。为了系统地衡量初级卫生保健系统的能力,PHCPI开发了初级卫生保健进展模型,这是一种基于评分标准的混合方法评估工具。初级卫生保健进展模型由国内团队通过参与式过程完成,随后由PHCPI进行审查,以验证结果并确保各国之间的一致性。2018年,PHCPI与五个国家合作试点该工具,发现可以忠实地实施该工具,产生有效的结果,并且利益相关者高度认可且认为其有用。试点结果表明,参与式评估过程和所得结果都对初级卫生保健的优势和劣势产生了新颖且可操作的见解。基于这些早期的积极成果,PHCPI将支持把初级卫生保健进展模型扩展到更多国家,以系统、全面地衡量初级卫生保健系统的能力,从而确定有针对性的改进工作并确定其优先顺序。