Viphonephom Phonevilay, Kounnavong Sengchanh, Reinharz Daniel
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Laval University, Quebec City, QC, Canada.
Lao Tropical and Public Health Institute (Lao TPHI), Ministry of Health, Vientiane, Lao PDR.
Trop Med Health. 2024 May 7;52(1):35. doi: 10.1186/s41182-024-00601-8.
The Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR), a lower-middle-income country, lags behind other Southeast Asian countries in immunization coverage for children under two years of age. The organization of health services is a key determinant of the functionality of immunization programs. However, this aspect, and in particular its decentralization component of the healthcare system, has never been studied.
A case study in the Lao National Immunization Program was performed using a neo-institutional theory-based conceptual framework, highlighting the structure (rules, laws, resources, etc.) and interpretative schemes (dominant beliefs and ideas) that underlie the state of decentralization of the healthcare system that support the conduct of the immunization program. Twenty-two semi-structured interviews were conducted with representative actors from various government levels, external donors, and civil society, in four provinces. Data were complemented with information retrieved from relevant documents.
The Lao healthcare system has a deconcentrated form of decentralization. It has a largely centralized structure, albeit with certain measures promoting the decentralization of its immunization programs. The structure underlying the state of centralization of immunization services provided is coherent with a shared dominant interpretive scheme. However, the rapid economic, technical, and educational changes affecting the country suggest that the coherence between structure and interpretative schemes is bound to change.
Unprecedented opportunities to access quality higher education and the use of social networks are factors in Lao PDR that could affect the distribution of responsibilities of the different levels of government for public health programs such as the National Immunization Program.
老挝人民民主共和国作为一个中低收入国家,在两岁以下儿童免疫接种覆盖率方面落后于其他东南亚国家。卫生服务的组织是免疫规划功能的关键决定因素。然而,这一方面,尤其是医疗保健系统的分权部分,从未得到研究。
采用基于新制度理论的概念框架,对老挝国家免疫规划进行了案例研究,突出了支持免疫规划实施的医疗保健系统分权状态背后的结构(规则、法律、资源等)和解释方案(主导信念和观念)。在四个省份,对来自各级政府、外部捐助者和民间社会的代表行为体进行了22次半结构化访谈。数据通过从相关文件中检索到的信息进行补充。
老挝医疗保健系统采用了一种权力分散的分权形式。它在很大程度上具有集中化结构,尽管有某些措施促进其免疫规划的分权。所提供的免疫服务集中化状态背后的结构与一种共享的主导解释方案相一致。然而,影响该国的快速经济、技术和教育变革表明,结构与解释方案之间的一致性必然会发生变化。
老挝有前所未有的机会接受优质高等教育以及利用社会网络,这些因素可能会影响老挝不同政府层级在诸如国家免疫规划等公共卫生项目中的责任分配。