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Introducing vouchers for malaria prevention in Ghana and Tanzania: context and adoption of innovation in health systems

Authors :
de Savigny, Don
Webster, Jayne
Agyepong, Irene Akua
Mwita, Alex
Bart-Plange, Constance
Baffoe-Wilmot, Aba
Koenker, Hannah
Kramer, Karen
Brown, Nick
Lengeler, Christian
de Savigny, Don
Webster, Jayne
Agyepong, Irene Akua
Mwita, Alex
Bart-Plange, Constance
Baffoe-Wilmot, Aba
Koenker, Hannah
Kramer, Karen
Brown, Nick
Lengeler, Christian

Abstract

There are striking similarities in health system and other contexts between Tanzania and Ghana that are relevant to the scaling up of continuous delivery of insecticide treated nets (ITNs) for malaria prevention. However, specific contextual factors of relevance to ITN delivery have led implementation down very different pathways in the two countries. Both countries have made major efforts and investments to address this intervention through integrating consumer discount vouchers into the health system. Discount vouchers require arrangements among the public, private and non-governmental sectors and constitute a complex intervention in both health systems and business systems. In Tanzania, vouchers have moved beyond the planning agenda, had policies and programmes formulated, been sustained in implementation at national scale for many years and have become as of 2012 the main and only publicly supported continuous delivery system for ITNs. In Ghana national-scale implementation of vouchers never progressed beyond consideration on the agenda and piloting towards formulation of policy; and the approach was replaced by mass distribution campaigns with less dependency on or integration with the health system. By 2011, Ghana entered a phase with no publicly supported continuous delivery system for ITNs. To understand the different outcomes, we compared the voucher programme timelines, phases, processes and contexts in both countries in reference to the main health system building blocks (governance, human resources, financing, informatics, technologies and service delivery). Contextual factors which provided an enabling environment for the voucher scheme in Tanzania did not do so in Ghana. The voucher scheme was never seen as an appropriate national strategy, other delivery systems were not complementary and the private sector was under-developed. The extensive time devoted to engagement and consensus building among all stakeholders in Tanzania was an important and clear

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn999831026
Document Type :
Electronic Resource