Title: Emergencies and the Health Systems
1Emergencies and the Health Systems
2Health System
3Objectives
- At the end of this 1-hour session, the
participants will be able to - Define and discuss the building blocks of the
health system - Discuss how emergencies/disasters disrupt the
existing health system - Describe health emergency response using the
health systems approach
4Contents
- WHO health system building blocks
- Health systems in emergencies
5Emergency
Save lives
6Health system
Evacuation centres Security Nutrition
Surveillance Disease prevention and control
Logistics Information Management Resource
Mobilization Risk Communication
Emergency
Save lives
7What is a health system?
8The Health System
- A health system consists of all organizations,
people and actions whose primary intent is to
promote, restore or maintain health - Includes efforts to influence determinants of
health as well as more direct health-improving
activities - Includes
- A mother caring for a sick child at home
- Private care providers
- Behaviour change programmes
- Vector-control campaigns
- Health insurance organizations
- Occupational health and safety legislation
- Inter-sectoral action by health staff
9The WHO Health Systems Framework
System building blocks
Goals/outcomes
Service delivery
Improved health (level and quality)
Health workforce
Access coverage
Responsiveness
Information
Medical products technologies
Financial risk protection
Quality safety
Health financing
Improved efficiency
Leadership/ governance
10The WHO Health Systems Building Blocks
- Service delivery
- Health workforce
- Information
- Medical products and technologies
- Health financing
- Leadership/governance
11The WHO Health Systems Building Blocks
- Service delivery
- Effective, safe, quality personal and
non-personal health interventions to those who
need them, when and where needed, with minimum
waste of resources - Health workforce
- Responsive, fair and efficient to achieve the
best health outcomes possible, given available
resources and circumstances - Sufficient numbers and mix of staff, fairly
distributed - Competent, responsive and productive.
- Information
- ensures the production, analysis, dissemination
and use of reliable and timely information on
health determinants, health systems performance
and health status
12The WHO Health Systems Building Blocks
- Medical products and technologies
- Equitable access to essential medical products,
vaccines and technology - Assured quality, safety, efficacy and
cost-effectiveness, and their scientifically
sound and cost-effective use - Health financing
- Adequate funds for health, in ways that ensure
people can use needed services, and are protected
from financial catastrophe or impoverishment
associated with having to pay for them - Leadership/governance
- Existence of strategic policy frameworks that are
combined with effective oversight,
coalition-building, the provision of appropriate
regulations and incentives, attention to
system-design, and accountability
13Health Systems in Emergencies
- Emergencies/disasters affect the health system
- Consideration for assessment, planning and
implementation of response - Response, reconstruction and preparedness phases
14How do disasters affect the health system?
6 Building Blocks of the Health System Health
services Health Workforce Health
Information Medical Products and
Technologies Health Financing Health Governance
Socio-political context
Environmental context
Health
Economic context
Community lifelines water, electricity,
transportation
Source Informal discussion with Dr R Lejano, UC
Irvine, 2009
15Activity 3 How emergencies/disasters affect the
health system
- Divide into 3 groups
- Discuss on how disasters can affect the building
blocks of the health system, - Group A Service delivery, health workforce
- Group B Information, medical products and
technologies - Group C Health financing, leadership/ governance
- List down salient points and discuss with the
group
16Activity 3 Results
- Service delivery
- Health workforce
- Information
- Medical products and technologies
- Health financing
- Leadership/governance
17How disasters affect the health system
- Service delivery
- Medical surgical services outpatient and
inpatient care - Public health services immunization, health
promotion, reproductive health, environmental
health, maternal and child health - Health workforce
- Direct and indirect impact to health
professionals and their families - Same number of staff to work on increased demand
- Safety, security psychosocial support
18How disasters affect the health system
- Information
- Information system breakdown
- Need for rapid information
- Medical products and technologies
- Damages and losses
- Increased demand for medical products and
technologies
19How disasters affect the health system
- Health financing
- Direct and indirect economic losses
- Increased demand for expenditure
- Response require faster resource/finance
mobilization mechanisms - Leadership/governance
- Increased demand for quick decision making
- Shift to emergency mode
- Influx of external agencies, NGOs and groups
20WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- WHO/WPRO, 2009
- (Lejano, Sablan, et al)
- Tool developed for assessment of the health
systems in order to aid health emergency planners
and policy makers for medium- and longer- term
decisions. - Questions are answerable by YES or NO.
21WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- Service delivery
- Are there health facility structures/buildings
and/or key equipment within them that have been
damaged by the disaster? - Are there support systems that have been damaged
by the disaster? - Are there health services/programs that have been
compromised by the disaster?
22WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- Health workforce
- Did staff complement/ number of personnel
reporting for work become a problem in the
adequate carrying out of emergency response and
recovery measures? - Did staff knowledge and skills become a problem
in the adequate carrying out of emergency
response and recovery measures? - Were the members of the hospital staff affected
by disrupted lifelines (i.e., communication,
transportation, shelter)?
23WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- Information
- Are there concerns regarding health information
systems concerning individuals as patients? - Are there concerns regarding health information
systems on health facilities? - Are there concerns regarding health information
on the general population? - Are there concerns regarding health information
concerned with public health?
24WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- Medical products and technologies
- Is there adequate supply of essential drugs in
the health facilities? Are these readily
available and affordable? - Are there concerns regarding quality of the
drugs/vaccines available in the health facilities
and pharmacies? - Are there concerns regarding availability, safety
and accessibility of blood transfusion services
in the health facilities? - Are there concerns regarding the availability of
hospital equipment necessary for the basic
surgical, anesthetic, medical and emergency care
appropriate for the level of service a health
facility offers? - Are there concerns regarding safety, reliability
and availability of diagnostic and laboratory
technology services in the area? - Are there concerns regarding safety, reliability
and availability of diagnostic and imaging
services in the area?
25WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- Health financing
- Did the disaster affect (increased, decreased,
scrapped) the revenue, government funding, and
expenses of the health facilities in the subject
area? - Was funding of health programs affected
(increased, decreased, scrapped) by the disaster?
26WPRO Health Systems Assessment Tool
- Leadership/governance
- Did the disaster reveal any major issues in how
emergencies are responded to, in how tasks and
funds are allocated during emergencies, and how
decisions are made during emergencies? - Did the government and other agency response to
the disaster divert from and possibly change the
way decision-making, allocation of funds, and
allocation of tasks among agencies are made
during an emergency?
27References
- http//www.wpro.who.int/sites/hsd/overview.htm
- Philippine Floods Response Evaluation using the
Health Systems Approach (WHO/WPRO, 2009)