Research and Development Solutions (RADS), Islamabad, Pakistan.
Ministry of National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination, Islamabad, Pakistan.
Front Public Health. 2024 Aug 5;12:1379867. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1379867. eCollection 2024.
In 2020, Pakistan faced the formidable challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic with an existing yet disjointed healthcare infrastructure, that included by over 18,000 public and an estimated 75,000 private health facilities and some elements of an epidemic surveillance and response system. This descriptive study examines how Pakistan developed a COVID-19 response, driven by establishing a central coordination and decision-making mechanism to overcome these systemic challenges.
The study is based on interviews and interactions of the many actors in the response by the authors, who also participated in nearly all proceedings of the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) and many of the National Coordination Committee (NCC). This information is supplemented by reviewing documents, reports, news items, media and social media, and journal articles.
The study highlights the critical role of political arrangement, where the NCC, comprising of ministers, bureaucrats, and military personnel, facilitated federal and provincial integration. The NCC found resources and set policy. Its direction was implemented by the NCOC, a top-down yet inclusive platform, integrated political, military, and civil society actors, to ensure cohesive decision-making and implementation. It provided technical guidance, harnessed data for strategic decisions and held implementers accountable. At its peak, the NCOC boasted nearly 300 personnel, including high-ranking military officers, a stark contrast to the limited staffing in most ministries. In addition, the response's success is attributed to the perception of COVID-19 as an existential threat, leading to unprecedented collaboration and decisive actions that were enforced authoritatively.
Pakistan's experience offers valuable insights for proactive management of health emergencies in resource-limited settings. It underscores the necessity for inter-sectoral dialog and data-driven policy implementation, especially in the context of political economies where activity-driven governance often overshadows objective-driven policy execution. However, the lessons from the COVID-19 response, including a blueprint for future epidemic responses and lessons for use of data and evidence in developing country health systems, if not institutionalized, risk being lost in the post-pandemic era.
2020 年,巴基斯坦面临着 COVID-19 大流行的严峻挑战,当时该国已经存在但相互脱节的医疗基础设施包括超过 18000 个公立卫生机构和大约 75000 个私立卫生机构,以及一些流行病学监测和应对系统的要素。本描述性研究考察了巴基斯坦如何通过建立中央协调和决策机制来应对这一挑战,从而制定了 COVID-19 应对措施。
本研究基于作者在应对措施中与许多参与者的访谈和互动,作者还参加了国家指挥和运营中心(NCOC)的几乎所有会议以及国家协调委员会(NCC)的许多会议。这一信息通过审查文件、报告、新闻报道、媒体和社交媒体以及期刊文章进行了补充。
该研究强调了政治安排的关键作用,NCC 由部长、官僚和军事人员组成,促进了联邦和省级的融合。NCC 发现了资源并制定了政策。NCOC 执行了该方向,这是一个自上而下但具有包容性的平台,整合了政治、军事和民间社会行为体,以确保协调一致的决策和执行。它提供了技术指导,为战略决策收集数据,并对执行者负责。在其高峰期,NCOC 拥有近 300 名人员,包括高级军官,这与大多数部委的有限人员配置形成鲜明对比。此外,应对措施的成功归因于将 COVID-19 视为生存威胁的看法,这导致了前所未有的合作和果断行动,这些行动是通过权威强制实施的。
巴基斯坦的经验为资源有限环境下主动管理卫生突发事件提供了有价值的见解。它强调了部门间对话和数据驱动政策实施的必要性,特别是在活动驱动型治理往往掩盖客观驱动型政策执行的政治经济环境中。然而,如果不将这些经验制度化,包括为未来的疫情应对制定蓝图以及在发展中国家卫生系统中使用数据和证据的经验,那么这些经验可能会在疫情后时代消失。