Stein Dorit Talia, Ssessanga Adrian, Olaro Charles, Sabiiti Jesca Nsungwa, Kyaddondo Betty, Mbabazi Catherine, Ssengooba Freddie, Makumbi Fredrick E
Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Health Policy Planning and Management, Makerere University School of Public Health, Kampala, Uganda.
BMJ Public Health. 2025 Apr 15;3(1):e001813. doi: 10.1136/bmjph-2024-001813. eCollection 2025.
The effectiveness of national policies in decentralised health systems depends on local-level implementation. This study examines whether variation in implementation of national guidelines across districts and health system functions explains differences in local health system performance in maintaining continuity of essential maternal health, family planning and child vaccination services during the COVID-19 pandemic in Uganda.
We used routine health data and an interrupted time-series analysis to estimate district-specific relative declines in service outputs during COVID-19 compared with expected volumes if prepandemic trends continued for maternal health, family planning and child vaccination services. We randomly selected 57 districts across 15 regions and measured the implementation of national guidelines for maintaining essential health services through a web-based survey of district health teams. We generated 'implementation summary scores' by health system function and service category, representing the proportion of guidelines reported implemented by districts. We tested associations between implementation scores and performance.
On average, districts (n=42; 74% response rate) reported implementing 58% (95% CI 54-62) of guidelines across health system functions, ranging from 33% (24-41) for 'financing' and 43% (36-49) for 'service delivery' to 93% (89-96) for 'coordination and communication' and 88% (81-94) for 'monitoring'. Districts reported implementing 60% (53-68) of guidelines requiring national government action. District performance in maintaining child vaccination services was positively associated with vaccine-specific 'financing' and 'national government' implementation summary scores after controlling for geography and district characteristics.
Variation in implementing national-level policy across districts indicates inefficiencies or inequities across geographies in Uganda in terms of ability and capacity to respond to emergencies. Local guideline implementation also varied across health system functions, with financing and service delivery-related guidelines having the lowest implementation scores. Future emergency responses should consider how to balance local adaptations with central support by identifying which health system functions districts can more easily manage and adjust independently.
国家政策在分权式卫生系统中的有效性取决于地方层面的实施情况。本研究探讨了乌干达在2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间,各地区和卫生系统职能在实施国家指南方面的差异是否能够解释地方卫生系统在维持基本孕产妇保健、计划生育和儿童疫苗接种服务连续性方面的绩效差异。
我们使用常规卫生数据和中断时间序列分析,来估计与如果大流行前趋势持续时孕产妇保健、计划生育和儿童疫苗接种服务的预期量相比,COVID-19期间各地区特定服务产出的相对下降情况。我们在15个地区随机选择了57个地区,并通过对地区卫生团队的网络调查来衡量维持基本卫生服务的国家指南的实施情况。我们按卫生系统职能和服务类别生成了“实施汇总分数”,代表各地区报告实施的指南比例。我们测试了实施分数与绩效之间的关联。
平均而言,各地区(n = 42;回复率74%)报告称在卫生系统职能中实施了58%(95%置信区间54 - 62)的指南,范围从“融资”的33%(24 - 41)、“服务提供”的43%(36 - 49)到“协调与沟通”的93%(89 - 96)以及“监测”的88%(81 - 94)。各地区报告称实施了60%(53 - 68)需要国家政府采取行动的指南。在控制地理和地区特征后,各地区在维持儿童疫苗接种服务方面的绩效与疫苗特定的“融资”和“国家政府”实施汇总分数呈正相关。
各地区在实施国家层面政策方面的差异表明,乌干达在应对紧急情况的能力和容量方面存在地域上的低效率或不公平现象。地方指南的实施在卫生系统职能之间也存在差异,与融资和服务提供相关的指南实施分数最低。未来的应急响应应考虑如何通过确定哪些卫生系统职能地区能够更轻松地独立管理和调整,来平衡地方适应性与中央支持。