Health System Development team, World Health Organization Country Office for the Lao People's Democratic Republic, 125 Saphanthong Road, Unit 5, Ban Saphanthongtai, Sisattanak District, Vientiane Capital 0103, Lao People's Democratic Republic.
WHO Representative to Lao People's Democratic Republic, World Health Organization Country Office for the Lao People's Democratic Republic, 125 Saphanthong Road, Unit 5, Ban Saphanthongtai, Sisattanak District, Vientiane Capital 0103, Lao People's Democratic Republic.
Health Policy Plan. 2024 Jan 23;39(Supplement_1):i131-i136. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czad090.
Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) aims at graduating from least developed country status by 2026 and must increase the level of domestic financing for health. This paper examines how the government has prepared for the decline of external assistance and how donors have applied their transition approaches. Adapting a World Health Organization (WHO) framework, reflections and lessons were generated based on literature review, informal and formal consultations and focus group discussions with the Lao PDR government and development partners including budget impact discussion. The government has taken three approaches to transition from external to domestic funding: mobilizing domestic resources, increasing efficiency across programs and prioritization with a focus on strengthening primary health care (PHC). The government has increased gradually domestic government health expenditures as a share of the government expenditure from 2.6% in 2013 to 4.9% in 2019. The Ministry of Health has made efforts to design and roll out integrated service delivery of maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health services, immunization and nutrition; integrated 13 information systems of key health programs into one single District Health Information Software 2; and prioritized PHC, which has led to shifting donors towards supporting PHC. Donors have revisited their aid policies designed to improve sustainability and ownership of the government. However, the government faces challenges in improving cross-programmatic efficiency at the operational level and in further increasing the health budget due to the economic crisis aggravated during Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Working to implement donor transition strategies under the current economic situation and country challenges, calls into question the criteria used to evaluate transition. This criterion needs to include more appropriate indicators other than gross national income per capita, which does not reflect a country's readiness and capacity of the health system. There should be a more country-tailored strategy and support for considering the context and system-wide readiness during donor transition.
老挝人民民主共和国(老挝)的目标是在 2026 年之前摆脱最不发达国家地位,必须提高国内卫生融资水平。本文探讨了政府如何为外部援助的减少做准备,以及捐助者如何应用其过渡方法。本文采用世界卫生组织(世卫组织)框架,通过文献回顾、与老挝政府和发展伙伴的非正式和正式磋商以及焦点小组讨论,生成了思考和经验教训,包括预算影响讨论。政府采取了三种方法从外部资金向国内资金过渡:调动国内资源、提高各项目效率和重点优先事项,重点是加强初级卫生保健。政府已逐步将国内政府卫生支出占政府支出的比例从 2013 年的 2.6%提高到 2019 年的 4.9%。卫生部努力设计并推出孕产妇、新生儿、儿童和青少年卫生服务、免疫和营养综合服务交付;将 13 个关键卫生项目信息系统整合到一个单一的区卫生信息系统 2 中;并优先考虑初级卫生保健,这导致捐助者转而支持初级卫生保健。捐助者重新审视了旨在提高可持续性和政府所有权的援助政策。然而,由于 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)加剧的经济危机,政府在提高跨项目运营效率和进一步增加卫生预算方面面临挑战。在当前经济形势和国家挑战下努力实施捐助者过渡战略,这对评估过渡的标准提出了质疑。除了人均国民总收入之外,还需要包括更合适的指标,因为人均国民总收入不能反映一个国家的准备情况和卫生系统的能力。应该有一个更适合国情的战略,并支持在捐助者过渡期间考虑到背景和全系统的准备情况。