Title: Community Health Approaches in Conflict and PostConflict Countries
1Community Health Approaches in Conflict and
Post-Conflict Countries
- Haiti, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of
Congo
Charles Franzén May 26, 2008
2- What is Community Health?
Communities are an essential determinant of
health and the indispensable ingredient for
effective public health practice.
3Ensuring that badly needed resources and
services reach their ultimate destination and
fulfill their ultimate purpose of improving
health at the community level. --Global Health
Council, Preliminary Program (2008)
4Reaching people beyond the end of the
road. --Dr. Uche Amazigo, DirectorAfrican
Program for Onchocerciasis Control
5IMA World Health Major Program Areas
- 1) HIV Care Treatment Services (ART)
- AIDSRelief Project (335m, 5-year project) no
fixed amount for IMA and/or other consortium
members - 2) HIV Care Support Services (HBC palliative
care) - Tutunzane HBC Project in Tanzania (100k-200k
p.a.) - Global Fund HIV/AIDS DRCongo in 25 Health Zones
- 3) Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Services
- ACCESS Project in Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, etc.
TBD
6Major Program Areas
- 4) Health Systems Development Strengthening
- SANRU III in DRC (ended 2006) (27M, 5-yr
project) - AXxes Project in DRC (40M 3-year project)
- South Sudan Umbrella Program to Provide Basic
Package of Health Services (MDTF/World Bank) - PMURR project (3 grants supporting 23 HZs) in DRC
(14M) - SANRU Program SANRU NGO (planned)
7Major Program Areas
- 5) Malaria Treatment and Control
- Global Fund - DRC to 16 Health Zones
- Malaria Community Programs
- CSSC MCP/PMI Project in Tanzania -- 1.5 million
over 5 years - UPMB MCP/PMI Proposal Submission in Uganda (under
review) - IMA World Health provides Technical Assistance
8Major Program Areas
- 6) Neglected Disease Treatment Control (NDTC)
- RTI/USAID funded Haiti NTD Integration Program
LF STH -- 1 million annually for 3-5 years - New USAID/World Bank LF-Morbidity Management
funding for India Togo - LF project in Haiti (University of Notre Dame)
- National Onchocerciasis Control Programs in
Tanzania and DRC moving into long-term
sustainability phase - Nicaragua Deworming (on-going)
- Burkitts Lymphoma (on-going in Tanzania)
- Long-Term Programs Completed
- The Kilosa Rotary Project (water sanitation,
Oncho, ITN distribution) - LF (WB/Gates)- NGO partnerships in India,
Burkina, Nigeria, and MOH partnerships in Ghana
and Tanzania Included West Africa LF Morbidity
Management (hydrocele surgeries)
9Major Program Areas
- 7) Procurement and Logistics Management
- IMA Medicine Box
- Diflucan Partnership Program (coordinators in
Tanzania, Zambia (thru CHAZ), Haiti (thru
Association of Christian Health Institutions of
Haiti (AICSH) - Pharmaceutical Supply for USAID PEPFAR Program in
Haiti in partnership with AICSH - Liberia Revolving Drug Fund Supply Management
System
10Major Program Areas
- 8) Pharmaceutical Donations Programs
- Pfizer Diflucan Partnership Program (Tanzania,
Zambia, Haiti, and other countries) - The Medicine Box
- J J donations
- GSK donations
- Merck donations
- Abbott donations
- Axios International (DRC)
- Becton-Dickinson
- Boehringer Ingelheim
- Bristol-Myers Squibb
11 Major Program Areas
- 9) Capacity Building of FBO Networks
- Human Resource Capacity Development (Capacity
Project/IntraHealth-USAID) - Mapping with Global Mapping International (GMI)
- Information Systems development
- FBO health network advocacy
- FBO Co-management of health systems
- Improved planning/coordination with MoH
12IMA World Health Program Implementation Mechanisms
- Provides Technical Assistance to partners and
FBOs through - IMA staff e.g. AIDSRelief/Tanzania, South Sudan,
ACCESS, Capacity, etc. - Consultants, e.g. SANRU, AXxes, AIDSRelief Year 1
and part of Year 2 in Zambia, Kenya etc. - Staff of IMA member agencies e.g. In DRC and
phase I LF in Haiti - Staff hired through CHAs, e.g. Zambia DPP, Haiti
PEPFAR, AIDSRelief Year 1 in Kenya (CHAK) and
Uganda (UPMB) - Financial Reporting to the donor by HQ staff and
direct implementation and oversight by Grantees
e.g. LF - Direct procurement by HQ staff and in-country
logistics management by local partners, CHAs,
Technical Staff
13 14IMAWH Community Health Approach in Haiti
- Work in close collaboration with the Ministry of
Health and the Christian Health Association of
Haiti (AICSH) - Very disease disease-elimination focused
- Work in Lymphatic Filariasis for past 10 years
- In the past year, consortium prime on RTI/USAID
funded NTD Integration Program focusing on LF and
soil-transmitted helminths
15- 15 years of Community-Directed Treatment (ComDT)
in Tanzania provides many lessons for community
health interventions in Haiti - Communities own the program as they own the
diseases themselves - Treatment and record-keeping done in community by
community members - Follow up, supervision and monitoring all
community-directed - Close linkages with AICSH and the Ministry of
Health
16Haiti Challenges and Limitations
- Integration of two Ministry of Health kingdoms
(LF and STH) a major challenge - eg. Office Space, equipment, staff, vehicles, per
diems - Integration and agreement of two national disease
control programs using similar strategies - Esp. challenging in the Community Health
perspective - ComDT vs. School Health drug delivery
17- Managing partner/collaborator expectations
- Purchase of DEC as this is not a targeted
donation from a major pharmaceutical company - Scale-up to country wide coverage in three years
is this really possible with high quality
interventions and high coverage among the
eligible populations? - How to balance scale-up with true Community
Health approach? - General insecurity and continuing civil unrest in
PoP and along the major routes upcountry
18 19(No Transcript)
20IMAWH Community Health Approach in South Sudan
- One of the vastly underserved populations on the
planet (37 doctors for 10 million people!) - How are State, County, Hospital and facility
health delivery mechanisms going to reach the
people in need in rural areas? - Focus on BPHS program creating community health
outreach through county/health zone strengthening - Reestablish community health workers
21- Sub-contract and monitor health NGOs and INGOs in
Jonglei and Upper Nile states, strengthening
through capacity-building into county health
managers - Deploy diaspora Sudanese doctors to facilities to
reestablish community linkages - Reestablishing community health outreach to
facility catchment areas - Emphasis on training and building capacity
through training schools and programs - Community members selected for basic training in
health and hygiene
22- Emphasis on womens health, maternal and child
care issues including addressing conflict and
post-conflict gender-based abuses - Important linkages with local Sudanese health
service providers - Liaison with transitioning OFDA/USAID
opportunities and additional MDTF programs - In the two states, work through our faith-based
partnership including World Relief, World Vision,
SIM, SIC, PRDA, CD, CMA, ADRA and the vast
network of the newly formed Christian Health
Association of Sudan (CHAS)
23South Sudan Challenges Limitations
- Pre-post-conflict complexities, full
implementation of the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement (CPA) - Insecurity and armed clashes a reality to date
- Extremely weak central government with little or
no human resources capacity outside the Ministry
of Health - Community Health less a priority than basic
survival - Many health cadres not refresher-trained in 20
years - No experience of decentralization and
decision-making at health zone/county
administrative units - Managing expectations of partners/collaborators
esp. over use of sub-grants - Very poor financial and accounting capacity
across the board
24- As typical in other similar situations, extremely
high cost of materiel and salaries - eg. Some Clinical Officers receiving 3,000 p.m.
- Conflict in Unity State over boundary commission
rulings on ownership of disputed oil-bearing
lands this also extends into Jonglei and other
potential oil-bearing states - Millions of Sudanese are either refugees in other
countries or IDPs in the North or scattered areas
of the South - Flood season (April-November) rendering access
poor Supply Chain Management requires
pre-positioning to be workable in every case
25- The Democratic Republic of Congo
26IMAWH Community Health Approach in the DRC
- Communitaire, Health Zone and Appui Global
systems very well developed from SANRU I, II
III and are being built on in the AXxes Project - Community Health linkages through the community
health worker relay system and centrally placed
delivery mechanisms - Emphasis on vaccination and mother and child
health throughout the program
27- Conflict Resolution including addressing
gender-based violence and its aftermath - Protestant, Catholic and MoH linkages within the
Health Zone system each with an equal role to
play bringing their added value to all areas
where they are strong - In AXxes, proven Community Health experiences of
IMA World Health, World Vision and CRS throughout
the DRC creates a synergy of high expectation and
consequent high achievement
28DRC Challenges and Limitations
- Severe limitations in post-conflict and
pre-post-conflict areas - Humanitarianism vs. Community Health
- High expectations from donors after previously
successful effort Peter Principle in some
health zones - Extremely weak central government support
advantage (humanitarian work) vs. disadvantage
(development work) - Capacity-Building in Human Resources Management
and Continuous Training/In-Service Training - Reverse Cornucopia trying to take on too much
under very trying circumstances - Management of sub-grantees/partners and universal
health zone administration standards and
principles
29Advantages to Working with Faith-Centered Health
Service Delivery Networks for Community Health
- Effective Peace and Reconciliation efforts are
often faith-based and faith-centered - Members of faith-based indigenous networks
provide 30-60 of health care in developing
nations - Often the most important partner with the
Ministry of Health in health care service
delivery - In some countries, faith-centered organizations
are known as the founders of Community Health
programs - Faith-based training institutions likewise are
responsible for training a majority of health
workers - Much closer to local communities and local
authority structures act as voice of the very
poor - In DRC, Haiti and South Sudan, IMA World Healths
work could not be done without true partnership
at the local level with the faith community