Publication: The Ethiopian Health Extension Program and Variation in Health Systems Performance: What Matters?
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Date
2016
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Public Library of Science
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Fetene, Netsanet, Erika Linnander, Binyam Fekadu, Hibret Alemu, Halima Omer, Maureen Canavan, Janna Smith, Peter Berman, and Elizabeth Bradley. 2016. “The Ethiopian Health Extension Program and Variation in Health Systems Performance: What Matters?” PLoS ONE 11 (5): e0156438. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0156438. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156438.
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Abstract
Background: Primary health care services are fundamental to improving health and health equity, particularly in the context of low and middle-income settings where resources are scarce. During the past decade, Ethiopia undertook an ambitious investment in primary health care known as the Ethiopian Health Extension Program that recorded impressive gains in several health outcomes. Despite this progress, substantial disparities in health outcomes persist across the country. The objective of this study was to understand how variation in the implementation of the primary health care efforts may explain differences in key health outcomes. Methods and Findings: We conducted a qualitative study of higher-performing and lower-performing woredas using site visits and in-depth interviews undertaken in 7 woredas. We classified woredas as higher-performing or lower-performing based on data on 5 indicators. We conducted a total of 94 open-ended interviews; 12–15 from each woreda. The data were analyzed using the constant comparative method of qualitative data analysis. Substantial contrasts were apparent between higher-performing and lower-performing woredas in use of data for problem solving and performance improvement; collaboration and respectful relationships among health extension workers, community members, and health center staff; and coordination between the woreda health office and higher-level regulatory and financing bodies at the zonal and regional levels. We found similarities in what was reported to motivate or demotivate health extension workers and other staff. Additionally, higher-performing and lower-performing woredas shared concerns about hospitals being isolated from health centers and health posts. Participants from both woredas also highlighted a mismatch between the urban health extension program design and the urban-dwelling communities’ expectations for primary health care. Conclusions: Data-informed problem solving, respectful and supportive relationships with the community, and strong support from zonal and regional health bureaus contributed to woreda performance, suggesting avenues for achieving higher performance in primary health care.
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People and Places, Geographical Locations, Africa, Ethiopia, Biology and Life Sciences, Neuroscience, Cognitive Science, Cognitive Psychology, Problem Solving, Psychology, Social Sciences, Medicine and Health Sciences, Health Care, Population Groupings, Professions, Supervisors, Economics, Finance, Health Services Administration and Management, Health Care Policy, Health Systems Strengthening, Health Education and Awareness
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