Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ministry of Health & Social Welfare Experiences in PBF Program in Liberia Community of Practice Conference March 18-19, 2011 Saly (Senegal) By Benedict C. Harris & Dominic Togba Outline • Country context • PBF Policy Development • Design & Implementation • Description of Experiences (actors, intervention sites) • Areas of concern • Lessons Learnt & Next Steps Country Context • • • • High Maternal mortality: 994/100,000 High Child mortality: 110/1000 (LDHS) High poverty level (64% below poverty line) Political stability and economic recovery and growth: – GDP: 2008/09 remains constant at around 10% – Liberia is 7th fastest growing economy in 2009 out of 44 countries MOHSW Vision & Mission • Vision: – 2011: is moving away from the post-conflict mentality to a vision of “Healthy population with social protection for all” • Mission: – “reform and manage the sector to effectively and efficiently deliver comprehensive, quality health and social welfare services that are equitable, accessible and sustainable for all people in Liberia” PBF Policy • Increase equitable access health services • Improve the quality of service provision • Strengthen national and county support systems to restore government management of government health facilities PBF Implementation Approaches: Piloted a mixture of approaches : - Contracting in- one level of government contracts with another - Contracting out- a partner is contracted with complete authority over all resources (human, material and financial) to provide health services PBF Design & Implementation • Contracting In: – Bomi County Health Team – Provision of BPHS in 19 health facilities – Bomi subcontracted with African Humanitarian Aid (AHA) to support provision of BPHS in 6 facilities – Amount: USD 2.1 Million (MoHSW Pool Fund*) – Period: Nov 2009-June 2011 • Contracting Out: – 5 NGOs (Merlin, AHA, International Rescue Committee, Save-the Children-UK and Pentecostal Mission Unlimited (PMU)) – Provision of BPHS in 100 facilities – 5 Counties: Maryland, Grand Gedeh, Nimba, Montserrado and Lofa – Amount: USD 18.5 Million (MoHSW Pool Fund) – Period: November 2009-June 2011 *MOHSW Pooled Fund established in April 2010 (with an initial 2-year timeframe) backed with DFID, Irish Aid and EU financial support PBF contracts by type of health facility Type of health facility Contracting-out (NGOs ) Contracting-in (BOMI CHT ) TOTAL Clinic 87 19 106 Health Center 8 0 8 Hospital 5 1 6 100 20 120 TOTAL PBF Budget by County PBF BUDGET (US$) COUNTY Bomi ORGANIZATION CHT AMOUNT 2,118,489 Gbarpolu AHA 2,326,021 Grand Gedeh Lofa Merlin PMU 4,384,330 2,111,701 Maryland Merlin 4,335,965 Montserrado / Bong Nimba SCUK IRC 1,268,632 1,520,661 Rivercess TOTAL AHA 2,628,488 20,694,287 PBF Key Accomplishments • PBF Structure: • Establishment of PBF Steering Committee • Set up a PBF sub-unit at MoHSW • Development of policy document and PBF contracts : • National PBF indicators selected • PBF targets selected (in progress) • PBF payment plan and budget developed • PBF M&E and data verification plan developed • Capacity building : • Study tour in Rwanda • Training of trainers (national and Bomi CHT) NB: Strong partnership with RBHS/MSH Constraints • Implementation constraints: • Lack of operation/implementation manual and tools providing guidelines for implementation • M&E and Data verification mechanism not yet fully operational • Delay in payment of the performance bonus to providers (leading to lack of motivation) • Few people trained in PBF implementation • Financial sustainability: • Pool fund : funds available up to June 2011 Lessons Learned • Retention of HRH in Bomi • Minimized HRH staff turnout • Need to have a complete unit responsible for PBF and fully staffed /capacitated • Avoid grey areas: Be able to clearly define roles and responsibilities of stakeholders (providers, contracting agency, etc) • Make transactions more efficient; providers performance bonus needs to be paid more frequently and timely Next Steps & Dates • Key activities* (2011): – Assessment of the PBF institutional and implementation arrangements – Development of the PBF operational manual – development of a detailed road map and costing/budget for long term sustainability – Conduct training of key implementers: • TOT (PBF Technical Committee, PBF Unit, NGOs implementing PBF) • Training of CHTs: PBF Task Force, Secretariat and validation Teams • Training of Health staff (community health dev, committee; staff at health centers/clinics) *: with technical support from RBHS and World Bank Next Steps & Dates • PBF scale-up plan: – Phase 1 (2011): Improve and consolidate existing PBF programs with NGOs and Bomi CHT – Phase 2 (2012-13): Extend PBF program to CHTs in 5 counties (where NGOs already operate including RBHS); Introduce PBF program at the hospital level – Phase 3 (2014-15): Extend PBF to all counties and shift NGOs roles to support CHT and health facilities; introduce Community PBF program Thank You for Your Attention