Title: Pan American Health Organization
1Social Protection in Health Conceptual
Framework Honduras, November 2006
Cecilia Acuña Program Manager Social Protection
in Health PAHO/WHO
2Social Protection in Health for maternal,
neonatal and child populations Background
- Social Protection in Health (SPH) for the
Maternal, Neonatal and Child (MNC) populations is
not a new issue in the public policy sphere, but
it has recently experienced new momentum (MDG,
PRSP) - Certain countries have developed targeted
maternal-child SP schemes, as is the case with
Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and Argentina - Others, like Brazil and Chile, have strengthened
their maternal-child social protection strategies
within the broader context of universal social
protection in health schemes - Many countries in the region have implemented a
mix of interventions aimed at protecting the
health of mothers, newborns and children - What currently characterizes Latin America in
terms of its schemes aimed at protecting the
health of mothers, newborns and children is the
great heterogeneity in the strategies that are
being implemented or developed
3Social Protection An evolving concept
- Safety nets
- This concept appeared for the first time in the
British Poor Law, which was in effect from 1598
to 1948 - Its goal was to keep people out of poverty,
guaranteeing a minimum income in order to satisfy
their basic needs (Bonilla and Gruat, 2003 IDB,
2001) - A new definition views safety nets as mechanisms
for social assistance in countries where, due to
poverty or institutional weakness, it is not
possible to introduce integrated social welfare
programs (World Bank, 1993) - Safety nets function as a temporary cushion
against specific shocks, through the use of
income transfers (residual welfare) -
-
4Social Protection An evolving concept
- Social management of risk
- Its objective is to support individuals,
households and communities when they confront
risk, mainly the risk of falling into poverty or
not being able to get out of it, therefore,
passing it on to future generations - In the health arena, it includes both reducing
the exposure to risks through targeted
interventions and mitigating the consequences of
this exposure through the distribution of risks
in private or informal insurance schemes - The focus is based on the individuals capacity
to manage risks and its goal is individual
well-being - It does not consider inter-personal
redistribution of income or resources as
necessary to achieve improved distribution of
well-being (Doryan et al, 2001, p.11) -
5An evolving concept
- Vulnerability
- Risk
- Financial insecurity
- Economic protection
- COMMON IDEA
- Transfers of goods/services or money to
- replace/compensate for the loss of income to
- specific population groups determined
- according to certain attributes
Common central elements
6An evolving concept Need to incorporate other
elements
- Citizenship
- Democracy building
- Equity
- Social inclusion
- Focus on social justice redistribution of
resources, goods and opportunities
7Social Protection under changing conditions
- The growth of informal labor, demographic changes
associated with an increase in life expectancy at
birth and increased mobility linked to broader
migratory movements have forced many countries
both industrialized and developing to
re-examine their social protection systems - A number of working groups have initiated the
process of reviewing and expanding the concept of
social protection, recognizing that the
traditional notion of social protection focused
on economic, not social, protection - (Important documents
- Transformative social protection, S.
Devereux, R. Sabates-Wheeler IDS working paper
232, Sussex 2004 - Enhancing Social Protection and Reducing
Vulnerability in a Globalizing World, UN, 2001
Report of the Secretary-General - Sustainable Social Development in a Period of
Rapid Globalization Challenges, Opportunities
and Policy Options, CapÃtulo V United Nations
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacific, UNESCAP 2005 ) -
-
8The debate about social protection doesnt take
place only in developing countries
- Current discussion about social policies in the EU
Social Protection
Social support networks? (Assistance for poor
and marginalized immigrant groups)
Universal protection? Expression of the
solidarity of society as a whole (Finland,
Sweden, Norway)
Social Security? Formalize the benefits for
informal workers, new labor pact
- Current discussion about Social Security in the
USA - Shared fund or individual capitalization funds
(pensions)? - Benefits Package that should be included in
Medicare - Extension of protection to illegal immigrants?
9Need to incorporate other concepts
- Social protection in the framework of social
rights - Social protection is economically possible even
in the poorest countries (Sen, 1999) - It should not be understood as residual or basic
assistance programs for the poor or for poor
countries it should be universal (NU 2001, OIT
2003) - It should allow for people to actively integrate
themselves into society and not just confront a
temporary or structural risk situation - It should be a central part of countries
economic development agendas - It should be understood as a tool for social
transformation within a framework of human
rights, equity and human development - It should integrate traditional and innovative
public, private and community-based strategies
10Social protection in health (SPH)
- The guarantee, granted by society through
government, that an individual or group of
individuals can meet its health needs and demands
through access to services under adequate
conditions of quality, timeliness and dignity,
without ability to pay serving as a restrictive
factor - (PAHO/WHO, Resolution CSP26/12 Extension of
Social Protection in Health Joint Initiative of
the Pan American Health Organization and the
International Labour Organization. Washington
DC, September 2002)
11Goals of Social Protection in Health
- Achieve Equity
- Guarantee access for everyone under equal
conditions (combat exclusion) - Protect the dignity of people
-
- Improve Health Outcomes
- Prevent health hazards
- Restore health
- Return the worker to the labor market
- Provide Financial Protection
- Avoid the costs associated with illnesses or
health hazards that push families or people into
poverty - Protect the standard of living of people and/or
families against losses in income due to illness
or poor health
12Central dimensions of the concept of Social
Protection in Health
- Health service coverage dignity and quality of
care - Population coverage access to health goods,
services and opportunities for everyone - Financial protection solidarity in financing
13There are three strategies for operationalizing
social protection in health
- Universal protection (for all citizens or
residents) - Protection for low-income people or groups in
specific situations - Protection for people that contribute or have
contributed to a scheme (fund) or insurance
(health, unemployment, pension, other)
ALL OF THESE PRESENT BOTH ADVANTAGES AND
CHALLENGES THEY ARE NOT MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE
THERE ARE
POSSIBLE SYNERGIES
14What is a social protection in health scheme?
- Organized set of public interventions aimed at
guaranteeing that groups and individuals are able
to meet their health needs and demands through
access to health care services in adequate
conditions of quality, dignity and opportunity,
regardless of their ability to pay
15Limitations of the traditional analyses of health
protection schemes
- Generally one-dimensional and focused on
financial analyses - Do not incorporate macro social determinants
- Do not explore the role that intervention plays
in the institutional and organizational sphere of
the health system - Do not consider the impact of the intervention on
beneficiaries behavior patterns - Do not consider the impact of the intervention on
those who are not beneficiaries
16What other elements should an analysis
incorporate?
- Equity, since it is a central issue for the
health of mothers, newborns, boys and girls - The macro social determinants of health, since it
has a powerful influence on maternal and child
health - Access to health goods and the coverage and
quality of the services provided, because they
are key factors in maternal, neonatal and child
health outcomes - The context, since the SPH scheme operates within
a historical, political, cultural and social
framework that determines its performance and the
way in which it is evaluated
17Does the maternal and child health situation
improve when a health protection scheme exists?
- Social protection in health schemes are neither
necessary nor sufficient for improving health
outcomes, but are an important determinant of
access to and satisfaction of the demand for
health goods and services - Promote adequate demand
- Allow access
- Protect the financial risks associated with
illness - GUARANTEE THE RIGHT TO HEALTH
18Analytical framework
Social protection in health scheme Financing/expe
nditure Organization of the supply Stewardship/reg
ulation Resource allocation human, physical,
technological Territorial distribution of
resources Changing patterns of demand Elimination
of barriers (economic, geographic, cultural)
Counteract the social determinants that affect
the demand for services and the health situation
Increase equity in access and/or use
Objective
Increase access, improve coverage, offset
exclusion
Improve health outcomes
19How do these factors interact
Social determinants of health
Social protection in health scheme
Perceived
Need for health
Equitable
Unperceived
Health outcomes
Access
Repressed
Demand for health
Expressed
Inequitable
Unmet
Met
20WHY ARE SPH SCHEMES CURRENTLY INDISPENSABLE IN
THE REGION OF THE AMERICAS?
- Persistence of economic, social, ethnic and
cultural exclusion - Existing social protection mechanisms are
insufficient for responding to new problems - To what degree are sectoral reforms meeting the
needs of the most vulnerable groups?
21Variables to consider in the design of SPH
schemes
- Migratory movements
- Growing informality-work-related mobility
portability of the guarantee - Changes in the demographic structure aging
- Changes in the family structures increasing
numbers of one-parent families where the
household head is female - Changes in the epidemiological profile increase
in costs - National structures federal, centralized, local
- Integration of sub-national/national programs
- Position of the country in the international
context/commitments - Size and characteristics of the pool
- Make explicit that the set of guarantees brings
with it important investments, changes in the
systems structures, and a political and social
negotiation process
22POLITICAL ECONOMY OF SPH
- The promotion of SPH strategies requires actors
to - Recognize the legitimate interests of the diverse
actors and interest groups involved in the
process - Create the conditions and dynamics for a broad
social dialogue that allows the democratic
participation of the diverse actors and the
appropriation of the proposal by all interested
parties, ensuring its implementation over time - Conceive the SPH scheme as a sustained, long-term
effort and one of the most relevant State
policies - Periodically review the policy and generate
successive plans of action with defined goals and
accountability at the highest political level in
the countries