Title: Participating voices: Constructing Programmatic Change for Inclusive Policies
1Participating voices Constructing Programmatic
Change for Inclusive Policies
- Ariel Frisancho Arroyo
- Improving the Health of the Poor a Human
Rights Approach - Program Manager
- (CARE Peru)
- afrisancho_at_care.org.pe
The Demand for Good Governance Summit June 2,
2008 World Bank / Washington, D.C.
2General Information
- Program purpose to strengthen Peruvian state /
society relations in the health sector, promoting
poor peoples health rights - Expected outputs a) Civil society organisations
develop and strengthen strategies for making
health sector policies and institutions respond
to, protect and promote health rights, especially
of the poor and marginalized people b) Civil
society and health providers have developed
participatory and inclusive mechanisms for
planning, provision and evaluation of health
services - 2004 DFID / 2005-2008 DFID, through PPA w/CARE
UK
3CAREs Health Rights Program World Banks
Accountability Triangle
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT Responsible for Policy
Making
Prioritization of Social Expenditure, Management
Agreements, Standards for Health Services Payment
Demands to congressmen, Claims through coalitions
as ForoSalud, Regional Health Councils
Politicians, congressmen
MoHealth, MoEconomics, MoLabour
Health Services Users Rights Law
Ministry of Health
Decentralisation Devolution, delegation
ForoSalud (Main Civil Society Health Network)
Health Policies Capacity Building on Health
Rights Participation
SUB-NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
- Social Surveillance
- gt Voice
- gtParticipation
- National
- Regional
- Provincial
Public Insurance
Ombuds-person Office
POLITICAL VOICE
Contract / Agreement
Participatory Monitoring
Alliances Civil Society
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
COALITIONS CITIZENS
PROVIDERS
USERS EMPOWERMENT
Physicians other Health providers
Hospitals, Health facilities and private clinics
Control of CLAS Assembly Participation in
Health Local Plans Participatory Budget, Choice
on Provider
Non-poor Health Services Users
Poor Health Services users
Participatory planning monitoring of CLAS
Citizen Surveillance Mechanisms Women
Empowerment
Improving
4- Is it possible for citizens and civil society
organizations to propel participatory strategies
for making public policies and officers/
authorities to contribute with the realization of
health rights?
5Strengthening CS Influence on Health Policies
- HR Program linked up with ForoSalud, the most
extended nation-wide civil society network in
health, to build capacity to participate in
decisions about health - Training on health rights and developing
capacities for collective action and advocacy
brought peoples bottom-up constructed policy
proposals to regional / national policy dialogues - ForoSalud members elected as people
representatives in National Health Council / 10
Regional Health Councils some ForoSalud policy
proposals institutionalized (i.e. Mental Health,
Health Promotion, etc) - ForoSalud is now positioned as a key actor within
Peruvian health sector, demanding consultative
processes for social and health policy design, M
Evaluation - ForoSalud has advanced in its own democratization
and decentralization process, and is currently
building increasing representation of the most
poor and excluded in its own structures. - The recently appointed Peruvian Minister of
Health (December 2007) has publicly recognized
ForoSalud as a both political and technical key
actor within Peruvian health sector.
6ForoSalud Influence on Health Policies Outputs
- 2002 3 w/ women organizations defense on SRH
priority - Along 2004 Bottom-up processes to construct
health policy proposals analyzing 1) Traditional
health problems 2) key social determinants of
health and 3) challenges on responsiveness of
health system to people needs. Approach
incorporated nation-wide in 2006 by MoH. - 2005 -6 Nation-wide campaign raising awareness
on challenges USA - Peru Free Trade
Agreement could generate for access to
medicines/now taken into account for FTA
implementation. - 2007 w/ women leaders citizen surveillance
scheme in Puno turned inspirational to the
Minister of Health he has propelled MoH
surveillance committees for the national
hospitals -
- 2008 ForoSalud representatives in the National
Health Council successfully obtained the Minister
of Health support and the National Health Council
approval of a Law proposal to balance composition
of "invited spaces", including the realization of
National Health Conventions, with a bottom-up
approach for the participatory presentation and
discussion of the new government health policy
and commitments.
7- ForoSalud CARE Peru multi-level
- Accountability Approach
- International
- Shadow report civil society follow-up on Paul
Hunt (UN Special Rapporteur on Health Rights)
Recommendations to Peru - National
- Law proposal on Health Services users Rights
Responsibilities - Balancing power-relations within invited spaces
for policy dialogue negotiation - Regional Local
- with ForoSalud, PHR USA Ombudsperson
Regional Office - Citizen surveillance on health services and
social programs quality effectiveness in Piura
Puno regions, linking Quechua and Aymara women
community leaders to regional offices of the
Ombudsperson to monitor womens health rights,
particularly their right to good quality,
appropriate maternal health services
8Lessons learned
- Participation as a means for influencing public
health policies and as an end in itself for
empowerment building of citizenship - Social communication dissemination of health
rights - Support the social movement agenda, with no
intention on imposing the aid agency agenda
(trust the locals) - Strengthening Voice is not enough to strengthen
governance work with both the demand and supply
sides - Multi-level interventions addressing a)
capacities of both right-holders and duty
bearers, b) strengthening dialogue spaces and c)
broader policy environment, through social
communication strategies to raise awareness
amongst public opinion. On the other hand,
Development Aid could be very influential
promoting rights better governance
9Model for Governance Rights Engagement
Layer 4 The international community might become
very influential in promoting rights,
participation and government fulfillment of its
obligations Or, it might not.
Key assumption - strengthening Voice is not
necessarily enough to strengthen
governance. (Based on a graphic of Goulden, J.,
adapted by Frisancho, A. Please send comments
and inquiries to afrisancho_at_care.org.pe)
10Strengthening MoH Ownership of RBA
- Window of opportunity upcoming visit by the UN
Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health and
newly appointed Minister of Health (2004) allowed
CARE to address institutional shortcomings in
cooperation with MoH -
- MoH improved relationships with civil society
placed inclusion and cultural appropriateness as
institutional priorities and created technical
units to work health rights contents within MoH. - 2004-06 National Mobilization on Health Rights
implemented macro-regional workshops training
on health rights and citizen participation
sanctioned norms to include cultural preferences
within health care practices. - Participatory construction of CLAS Law (2005-08)
11Chief challenges
- Social indifference facing the exclusion of the
poor - Facing weak legal enforceability mechanisms, need
of strengthening responsiveness, engagement and - accountability from public health services and
MoH - Historical top-down relations and power
inequities between health providers and community
(patrimonialismo) - Promoting social rights involves risks
authorities misunderstanding of CARE role, when
contributing to address institutional
shortcomings and systemic inequity - Lack of personnel within the regional
Ombudsperson offices, i.e., six officers for a
whole region -
- Engaging local experiences with major stake -
holders from the start promoting ownership
(early appropriation)
12Lessons for Development Aid Agencies
- Accountability Triangle working with demand
(long run, short run) as important as
strengthening government development programs - Advocacy processes demands capacity building
- Importance of strengthening the interface between
community and state national decentralisation
processes should give attention not only to the
quantity of participation provided by new
participatory mechanisms, but to its quality
(representative-ness, voice brought to decision
making tables, etc) - Promoting governance and empowerment demands time
and a more flexible approach which are more
difficult to get incorporated within traditional
co-operation deadlines and frameworks