Title: SUPPORTIVE SUPERVISION: CONCEPTS
1SUPPORTIVE SUPERVISIONCONCEPTS PERSPECTIVES.
- SIDE MEETING ON CAPACITY BUILDING
- 11th TFI 2003, Luanda, 3 December 2003.
Presented by Dr Evariste Mutabaruka, VPD/AFRO
2PRESENTATION PLAN
- Context and problem statement
- What is supportive supervision?
- Why supportive supervision?
- Prerequisite for supportive
- supervision
- Benefits of Supportive Supervision
- Supportive Supervision Process
- Challenges
- Perspectives
3SS Background(1)
- Health sector reforms decentralization and
integration - New Immunisation goals 90/80
- New strategy RED components
- Supervision as critical support for
- service delivery
- Supervision for access to quality services that
clients want or need - Supervision to improve performance of health
workers
4SS Background(2)
- GAVI 2000 80 DPT3 in every district of 80 of
developing countries by 2005 - TFI 2001 AFRO EPI Strategic Plan 2001-
- 2005 with 80/80 goal
- United Nations General Assembly Special Session
(UNGASS) 2002 90 FIC nationally, with at least
80 DTP3 coverage in every district by 2010.
5Five operational components needed to Reach
Every District
- Re-establishment of outreach services
- regular outreach for communities with poor access
- Supportive supervision
- on site training by supervisors
- Community links with service delivery
- regular meetings between community and health
staff - Monitoring and use of data for action
- chart doses, map population in each health
facility - Planning and management of resources
- better management of human and financial
resources
6CONCEPTS
7OUR COMMON GOAL..
-
- Building HWs capacity and commitment to carry
out safe, good quality immunization services,
enabling each individual to perform at their
personal best, through coaching and performance
management
8WHY SUPERVISION ?
- To make sure that operational objectives are
appropriate. - To find out what is being done well.
- To help staff to identify and solve problems
- To motivate the staff.
- To improve the skills of the staff
9SUPERVISION AS AN OPPORTUNITY
- - Helping service providers to achieve work
- objectives by improving their performance
- - Ensuring uniformity to set standards
- - Identifying problems and solving them at
- appropriate time
- - Helping other people take responsibility
- - Following up decision reached during last
- supervision visit
- - Identification of the staffing needs e.g.
training - needs
- -Providing opportunities for personal
development - - Maintaining and reinforcing the
administrative - and technical link between high and lower
levels
10SUPPORTIVE SUPERVISION PROBLEM STATEMENT
- Narrow focus of supervision on inspection of
certain areas - Punitive approach
- Lack of supervisory skills and knowledge
- Lack of supervisor authority to reward or
sanction performance - Infrequent or irregular supervision due to lack
of resources
11 MAKING SUPERVISION MORE EFFFECTIVE
- CHANGE!
- Need to change objectives of supervision
- Need to change frequency , duration and nature of
supervisory encounters - Need to make supervision more supportive and
facilitative
12CHARACTERISTICS OF SS.
- Focus on problem solving to assure quality and
meet client needs - Responsibility of entire team(supervisor-supervise
es) to ensure quality - Empowerment of health providers to monitor and
improve their performance - Supervisor acts as facilitator, trainer and coach
- Supervisees participate in supervising themselves
and each other - Decision-making is participatory.
13COMPARISON OF TRADITIONAL AND SUPPORTIVE
SUPERVISION
14PREREQUISITE FOR SS
- - A functional and accessible health care
delivery system - - Competent human resources both for
delivery of health care and for carrying out
supervision - - Team spirit between supervisors and health
personnel to be supervised - - Supervision tools with key information on
various technical programmes included in the
health care delivery package - - Well prepared supervision plan with
schedule of supervision - - A reliable Health management information
system - - Availability of logistics and financial
resources.
15THE PROCESS OF SS
Set expectations Job description, standards
Take action -support-
Monitor and Assess performance -performance
gaps/best practices
Identify problems and opportunities -collectively
-
16MECHANISMS OF SS
- Self/peer supervision Internal superv.
- External superv.
17BENEFITS OF SS
- Ø Builds partnerships with health workers
to maximize quality of services as opposed to the
traditional top-down approach of supervision - Ø Increases accountability and helps health
workers to see the progress in their work - Ø Identifies areas for improvement
- T - Provides on-site training and improves
skills of health workers - Ø Involves communities in supervision
process increasing demand for health
interventions (e.g. immunisation, IMCI, etc.) - Ø Opens opportunities for a peer
supervision when other centres in the district
meet to discuss progress and share lessons
learned - Ø Stimulates advocacy for supervised
district or health centre at province or central
levels to get needed support for better
performance.
18ON SITE TRAINING
- Interactive short training (2 3 hours)
- Selected priority topicsmicro-planning, using
monitoring chart, vaccine stock ordering,
ensuring uninterrupted supply of AD syringes,
making a map with target population, monitoring
of adverse events following immunization, safe
disposal of waste equipment - According to individual training needs.
- Use simplified updated job-aids
19CHALLENGES IN IMPLEMENTING SUPPORTIVE SUPERVISION.
- Too many actors involved
- More labour intensive
- Motivation and behaviour change of supervisors
- Need time and investment
- Need local appropriate and tested tools
- Need support from senior officials
- Has tobe integrated into the existing human
resource management system - Build on success
- Sustainability through collaborationg public
sector institutions
20The Reality of Today Integration!
- Health Sector Reforms
- Decentralization
- Integrated Planning at District Level/Health
minimum package - Integrated disease surveillance
- Integrated Supervision Plan and Checklist
- Efficiency
- Shared Logistics/Transport
- Allowances
- Polyvalent service provider vs Polyvalent
supervisor - Shift towards Community Health Provider
- Integrated Checklist
- Cost Effective Human Resource utilization
21WAY FORWARD FOR SS IN THE AFRICAN REGION
- Document best practices on site training,
motivation, self assessment - Adapt local SS tools
- Train supervisors
- Advocate SS resource mobilisation
- Implement integrated SS within selected
countries(see RED strategy)15 countries - Monitor SS
- Evaluate the effects/ impact of SS on the
performance of health services.
22FOR DISCUSSIONS
- HOW TO IMPROVE INTEGRATION COLLABORATION
BETWEEN VARIOUS HEALTH PROGRAMMES AT DISTRICT
LEVEL? - WHAT CONCRETE SUGGESTIONS/RECOMMENDATIONS TO
BETTER IMPLEMENT INTEGRATED TRAINING AND
SUPPORTIVE SUPERVISION?