1 / 15

Experiences of Free Health Care in Sierra Leone

Experiences of Free Health Care in Sierra Leone. Sierra Leone team presentation at the Improving Financial Access to Health Services Technical workshop - Dakar, Senegal, 2-4 November 2010 Presented by Michael m. Amara (Principal health economist). Health Sector Background.

elysia
Download Presentation

Experiences of Free Health Care in Sierra Leone

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Experiences of Free Health Care in Sierra Leone Sierra Leone team presentation at the Improving Financial Access to Health Services Technical workshop - Dakar, Senegal, 2-4 November 2010 Presented by Michael m. Amara (Principal health economist) 1

  2. Health Sector Background • Health care delivered by: • Government • Local and international NGOs • Faith-based Organisations • Private sector • Government system is decentralized: • Peripheral Health Units (PHUs) • District Hospitals • Tertiary Hospitals 1

  3. Health Care Financing in Sierra Leone • Sources of financing (NHA 2007): • Government 19.2% • Donors 11.0% • Households 69.2% • For a poor country, out-of-pocket expenses are very high hence finance is a barrier to accessing health care. • In the SDPS 2008, 88% of households reported cost as the critical barrier 1

  4. Strategic Context and Rationale The problem: • High maternal mortality • High child mortality • Sierra Leone off-track to meeting MDGs • Poor health indicators • Restrictive out-of-pocket costs Rationale for Free Health Care (FHC): • to remove the most important barrier preventing mothers and children in Sierra Leone from accessing health care services. 1

  5. Main Pillars of FHC Target Groups: • Pregnant women • Lactating mothers • Children under-five Package of Services: all services delivered in government health facilities to target groups are free of charge • FHC is not a separate programme 1

  6. Funding sources for FHC (2010) • Government of Sierra Leone (GoSL) contributed 34% (US$36,842,112). Substantial increased on health workers’ salaries. • Health Development Partners (HDPs) contributed 66% (US$19,187,212) 1

  7. Policy Development and Implementation • National Steering Committee with 6 subcommittees formulated • Providers involvement and capacity building • Procurement of drugs and medical supplies • Substantial increase in health care workers’ salary • Information and communication to whole population • Using existing financing management system; implementing PBF 1

  8. Monitoring FHC • Existing HMIS monitors utilisation data • Civil society organisations accompany drug deliveries to facilities • CSOs also check whether targets groups are being charged • CSOs use MoHS-designed questionnaire and checklist to check facilities and patient satisfaction 1

  9. Strengths and Weaknesses • Strengths • Political commitment • FHC addresses priority health financing problems of large sections of SL population • Involvement of nearly all health stakeholders • Substantial salary rises implemented • Absorption of 1,000 qualified and practicing health professionals 1

  10. Strengths and Weaknesses • Weaknesses • No prior costing of FHC (including impact of likely utilisation increases) conducted before policy decision made and implemented • FHC not budgeted for (either by government or its donor partners) • Insufficient human resource base • Irregular supply of drugs and supplies • Lack of readily available data (HRH and drugs consumption per district) 1

  11. Challenges • Cleaning and updating health workers’ payroll still on going; • Sustaining the substantial salary rises to health workers; • Delay in the absorption of health workers onto the govt. payroll • Financing and supply of required drugs and supplies; • Involvement of the Faith Based Organisations (FBOs) 1

  12. Lessons learnt • Ownership and leadership by the MoHS • Joint planning and budgeting • Proper coordination with the establishment of committees and groups • Full participation of all health partners 1

  13. The Future • Developing a national IHP+ Compact • Developing PBF as part of the sustainability • SWAp 1

  14. Acknowledgements The Team • Dr Heidi Jalloh-Vos, Health Program Manager, Medical Research Centre • Michael Dauda, Senior Local Govt. Finance Officer, Ministry of Finance and Economic Development • Falla Ensa-N’Dayma, National President, Trade Union Confederation of Sierra Leone Others (for comments) • Dr Aminata Kanu, Country Lead Sierra Leone, MLI • Dr Natalie Quinn, Overseas Development Institute Fellow, MoHS • Dr Chris Atim, Senior Health Economist, The World Bank • Alllison Kelley, Country Lead Mali, MLI • Dr. Edward B. Magbity, Principal Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist. 1

  15. Thank you!! 1

More Related