Priority Setting for Reproductive Health at the
District Level in the context of Health Sector Reforms in Ghana
April 2006
Population Council
Harriet Birungi, Philomena Nyarko
Ian Askew, Ayo Ajayi
UNFPA/Ghana
Gifty Addico
Ministry of Health, Ghana
Edward Addai
Ghana Health Service
Caroline Jehu-Appiah
This study was funded by UNFPA under Contract Agreement Number UNFPA/SSA/05/30 with funding
from the European Commission (EC) under the terms of the UNFPA/EC/GOG Project, the United States
Agency for International Development (USAID) under the terms of the FRONTIERS Cooperative
Agreement Number HRN-A-00-98-00012-00 and the Population Council under In-house Project 5800
53086. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of
the sponsors.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents ............................................................................................................. ii
List of Acronyms .............................................................................................................iii
Acknowledgements ......................................................................................................... v
Executive Summary........................................................................................................ vi
1.0 Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1
1.1 Background............................................................................................................. 1
1.2 Overall Objective.................................................................................................... 3
2.0 Methodology............................................................................................................... 3
2.1 Conceptual Framework......................................................................................... 3
2.2 Study Design........................................................................................................... 4
2.3 Data Collection ....................................................................................................... 5
3.0 Findings ....................................................................................................................... 6
3.1 The Content of RH in Ghana................................................................................ 6
3.2 Context for RH Services ........................................................................................ 8
3.2.1 Decentralization reforms ............................................................................... 8
3.2.2 Service delivery reforms ................................................................................ 9
3.2.3 Financing reforms ......................................................................................... 10
3.3 Priority Setting – Process and Actors................................................................ 15
3.3.1 National level priority setting
15
3.3.2 District level priority setting
17
3.3.3 What influences the selection of priorities at the district level?............. 18
3.4 Is reproductive health receiving attention at the district level?.................... 21
3.4.1 Is RH a perceived problem at the district level?....................................... 21
3.4.2 The position of reproductive health in the list of district priorities ...... 22
3.4.3 Do the media give attention to RH? ........................................................... 23
3.4.4 Is the RH programme adequately resourced? .......................................... 24
3.4.5 What is the capacity of districts to deliver RH services? ........................ 26
4.0 Discussion and Conclusion .................................................................................... 27
References ....................................................................................................................... 30
ii
List of Acronyms
ADH
AES
AIDS
ANC
AYA
BMC
CBO
CHPS
DA
DACF
DALYS
DANIDA
DFID
DHD
DHA
DHC
DHMT
GDHS
GHS
GPRS
GOG
HIV
HIPC
HSR
ICPD
IPT
MCH
MDG
MOH
NACP
NGO
NHIS
PMTCT
POW
RCH
RH
RHMT
SDHT
STI
SRH
SWAp
Adolescent Health
Awutu-Efutu Senya district
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
Antenatal Care
African Youth Alliance
Budget Management Centers
Community Based Organizations
Community Health and Planning Services
District Assembly
District Assemblies Common fund
Disability Adjusted Life Years
Danish International Development Agency
Department for International Development, UK
District Health Directorate
District Health Administration
District Health Committee
District Health Management Team
Ghana Demographic and Health Survey
Ghana Health Service
Ghana Poverty reduction Strategy
Government of Ghana
Human Immune Deficiency Virus
Highly Indebted Poor Country Initiative
Health Sector Reforms
International Conference on Population and Development
Intermittent Prevention and Treatment
Maternal and Child Health
Millennium development Goals
Ministry of Health
National AIDS Control Programme
Non Governmental Organization
National Health Insurance Scheme
Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission
Programme of Work
Reproductive and Child Health
Reproductive Health
Regional Health Management Team
Sub District Health Team
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Sexual and Reproductive Health
Sector Wide Approaches
iii
TBA
TT
UNFPA
UNICEF
USAID
WHO
Traditional Birth Attendant
Tetanus Toxoid
United Nation’s Population Fund
United Nation’s Children Fund
United States of Agency for International Development
World Health Organization
iv
Acknowledgements
The study team would like to acknowledge the technical review support received
from staff of UNFPA/Ghana, Ms. Jane Wickstrom, USAID/Ghana and staff of
Frontiers in Reproductive Health Program, Population Council.
During fieldwork, Ms. Nancy Ekyem and Mr. Noble Adiku provided valuable
assistance that made the facility assessment possible. Our appreciation also goes
to Dr. Arde- Acquah, Dr. Morrison and Dr. John Eleeza who kindly provided indepth information about their regions and districts during the course of the
study. We would also like to thank all members of the Ho and Winneba District
Health Management Teams as well as the members of the District Assembly Sub
Committees on Health for their cooperation and insightful contribution to the
study.
We thank Ms. Isabella Rockson and Ms. Angela Gadzepko (Population Council,
Accra) and Ms. Joyce Ombeva (Population Council, Nairobi) for their
administrative support throughout the study.
Above all, we would like to thank all other individuals not listed here who
agreed to participate in this study.
v
Executive Summary
This report outlines results of an in-depth assessment carried out during the
period November 2004 – August 2005. The purpose of the assessment was to
provide a better understanding of key factors affecting reproductive health
prioritization at district level, make recommendation for policy dialogue,
advocacy, resource allocation and reproductive health programme
implementation. This study assessed whether there is harmony or discrepancy
between national and district priority setting for RH, and whether Health Sector
Reforms (HSR) facilitate or constrain priority setting for RH at the district level.
In particular, the study examined whether districts are or are not connecting to
the central process of priority setting and reasons for not connecting.
The study was conducted at the national, regional and district levels. It included two
districts: Awutu-Efutu Senya (AES) in the Central region and Ho in the Volta region.
Data for the study were gathered through a desk appraisal of key documents, group
discussions, in-depth interviews with key informants directly and indirectly involved in
the priority setting process, and facility assessment.
This study confirms that reproductive health is a “stated” priority at both the national
and district levels. But priority setting is essentially driven at the national level -- the
national level sets priorities and districts implement them.
Health sector reforms in Ghana tend to support and reinforce a focus on the RH
package at the district level in three ways:
Organization of services in health institutions makes the provision of RH almost
mandatory since all health institutions at the district have RH/FP units that are
responsible for safe motherhood and family planning services. This institutional
arrangement ensures that reproductive health services stand out as an entity even in
the integrated approach to health services in the country.
The sector-wide approach adopted key RH indicators that form the basis for
assessing sector-wide performance and ensuring accountability at the district level.
For that reason the dialogue at the sector level is about both RH service delivery and
systems development. It is assumed under these circumstances that HSR in Ghana
should lead to the delivery of RH interventions. However, findings seem to imply
that HSR are not translating into service delivery because of inadequate capacity in
terms of drugs, supplies, equipment and service protocols.
Financing reforms did not discriminate in favor of RH services; nevertheless, since
the late nineties the country has been introducing exemptions that have increasingly
focused on ANC and supervised delivery. This is to be reinforced under the NHIS
programme.
vi
Ghana is, however, currently facing the challenge of harmonizing a comprehensive
definition of RH and the reality of selective implementation at the district level. There
is, therefore, a gap between the RH components as stated in the national policy and the
components available at the district level. The reality districts face is that they do not
have enough capacity to do all that has been defined in the national policy and
therefore have to make choices within the institutional arrangements defined in the
health sector.
Program managers and service providers tend to focus on aspects of RH consistent with
their mission and comparative advantage. Both the public and private health
institutions tend to focus on safe motherhood, FP and STI/HIV/AIDS while NGOs tend
to focus on the abandonment of harmful traditional practices and promotion of sexual
health. The management of infertility and RH cancers is absent in both districts.
The fact that national level priorities are district level priorities leads us to conclude that
the thrust of activities at the district level is about building capacity to implement
national priorities rather that selecting priorities per se. Secondly, the challenge facing
RH is not HSR per se but the broad range of RH services and the capacity required to
ensure that they are fully integrated into the health system. The contribution of health
sector reforms to reproductive health is in ensuring that health systems development
under HSR keeps pace with the capacity needed to deliver RH interventions. In the case
of Ghana, it appears HSR has so far been unable to do so.
Recommendations for bridging the policy implementation gap include:
Ensuring that RH advocates participate in national policy dialogue
Investing in systems development for procurement and delivery of drugs and
supplies to the health institutions
Recognizing that other implementers, in particular NGOs, have a comparative
advantage in the delivery of certain components and mobilizing them to deliver
these packages to ensure availability of these services at the district level
Mobilizing District Assemblies to support RH activities.
vii
1.0 Introduction
1.1 Background
Ghana has recognized that improved Reproductive Health (RH) Services are
important in achieving the goals of the Ghana Poverty Reduction Strategy
(GPRS) and Millennium Development Goals (MDG). Reproductive health
services are implemented within the framework of the health sector reforms.
The Second Health Sector Five Year Programme of Work (2002 –2006) has
adopted seven reproductive health indicators, namely; maternal mortality ratio,
HIV seroprevalence among the reproductive age, family planning acceptor rates,
antenatal care coverage, supervised delivery, post natal care and maternal deaths
audited rates as core reproductive health indicators for measuring sector-wide
performance.
In recent years, several interventions have been developed for improving reproductive
health, which indicate the government’s high level of commitment to the issue. These
include a National RH Service Policy, Standards and Protocols; maternal death and
clinical audit guidelines; capacity building through skills development; supply of
equipment; advocacy at all levels, community-based health planning and services; and
a selective exemption policy for free antenatal care.
However, despite this level of commitment, maternal mortality still remains high at 214
deaths per 100,000 live births. Family planning acceptance has also remained
persistently low with a modern contraceptive prevalence rate of just 13 percent in 1998
and 19 percent in 2003 (GDHS). The proportion of women who give birth with the
assistance of a skilled birth attendant, a proxy measure of the risk of maternal morbidity
and mortality, is still rather low. Less than half (47 percent) of the births in Ghana are
delivered by a health professional (GDHS, 2003).
HIV/AIDS is an emerging challenge to health in Ghana and is feared to undermine all
the progress achieved in the health sector if not tackled (MOH & GHS 2002). The 2003
sentinel survey among women attending ANC clinics shows an HIV site prevalence
range of 0.6 – 9.2 percent (GHS, 2003).
The fifth MDG has set a target of reducing the maternal mortality ratio to 54/100,000 by
year 2015, while the GPRS has set a target of 160/100,000 by 2005 (UNFPA/MOH
March 2004). In order to meet these targets, Ghana will have to review strategies
influencing these key indicators and modify activities in the second 5 Year Programme
of Work (POW) during the coming year.
The key challenge is to ensure that RH is adequately funded and remains a priority at
the policy and implementation levels. For instance, a recent review on the role of
UNFPA in Sector Wide Approaches (SWAp) suggests that the level of priority setting
1
for RH differs between national (policy) and district (implementation) levels
(Enyimayew, 2003). Also, anecdotal evidence suggests that district managers may
allocate funds away from programs they perceive as having significant vertical funding
(for example HIV/AIDS and adolescent health).
While it is globally acknowledged that SWAp may have facilitated the interaction
between MOH and donors, Jeppsson (2002) has raised a number of issues concerning
the nature of the partnership between actors in the SWAp process in a decentralized
context. One critical issue that seems not to have been explicitly addressed is whether
SWAp affects the power balance and the relationship between the MOH on one hand,
and the district level on the other, and if so how this affects priority setting. Elsewhere,
Mayhew et al (2003) have also argued that in contexts where SWAp are implemented
alongside decentralization, reforms may impede priority setting for RH and/or even
polarize RH activities in district plans and actions in part because priority setting is
influenced by political and organizational factors that are not considered by current
priority setting tools such as Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALYS).
Recent international literature on Health Sector Reforms (HSR) observes that
Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) is almost invisible in the HSR agenda
(Standing, 2002; Hill, 2002; Mayhew and Adjei, 2004). Three major reasons
account for this. First, there is a serious language and discourse gap between
those participating in HSR and those responsible for SRH that rarely interacts
internationally, nationally or locally; when meeting, HSR actors tend to speak in
a managerial/technocratic language, while SRH actors tend to speak an
advocacy language. HSR discourse focuses mainly on system strengthening
interventions, such as financing mechanisms and human resources management,
while SRH discourse is pre-occupied with advocating for RH interventions,
packages and services. Secondly there is a debatable perception that health
sector reformers tend to see SRH as a vertical or special interest program, thus
neglecting it, while RH advocates tend to question the ability of health sector
reforms to focus on and deliver RH interventions. The situation is even made
more complex by the fact that SRH advocates have not sufficiently understood
the importance of engaging in systems reforms while health sector reformers
have not understood that reforms will be judged to be successful only if they
deliver health interventions including SRH interventions. Thirdly, and more
specific to Ghana was a desire by the SRH programme to want to remain semiindependent, retaining its own earmarked funding and specialized cadre
(Mayhew and Adjei, 2004).
UNFPA/Ghana and other health sector development partners wanted a better
understanding of the key factors affecting RH prioritization at the district level. They
requested a study that would address the following issues:
2
Whether RH is a priority at the district level;
Whether there is harmony or discrepancy between national and district level RH
priorities; and
Whether HSR facilitates or constrains priority setting for RH at the district level.
The purpose of the study is, therefore, to inform UNFPA, MOH and other health sector
development partners on future strategies to ensure that RH is a priority at the district
level so that it will be adequately funded. It is expected that UNFPA and other RH
advocates in Ghana will use the findings from this study to press for greater focus on
RH at the district level. It will guide the MOH and other health development partners in
the health sector SWAp in negotiating an appropriate balance between concerns for
health systems strengthening and improved delivery and quality of RH services.
Information generated by the study is also useful in informing decisions on how to
reprioritize RH concerns at the district level in order to sustain policy targets.
1.2 Overall Objective
The overall aim of the study was to examine facilitating and inhibiting factors in RH
priority setting at the district level, and make recommendations for policy dialogue,
advocacy, resource allocation and RH program implementation.
2.0 Methodology
2.1 Conceptual Framework
The debate on priority setting is about government as an allocator of scarce health care
resources involving the selection of health services, programmes or actions that will be
provided first, with the purpose of improving the health benefits and distribution of
health resources. Ideally, priority setting is perceived as a technical process requiring
the quantitative analysis of the burden of diseases, premature mortality and disability
losses, the analysis of cost-effectiveness of alternative interventions to control the
diseases that cause the largest health losses and then the selection of a package or list of
interventions that can be delivered with the available budget through the current health
system (Ham, 1996; Bobadilla, 1996). In reality priority setting is more complex than
this. The process is frequently influenced by political, institutional and managerial
factors.
This study drew on two mutually reinforcing conceptual frameworks: 1) the Walt and
Gilson (1994) policy analysis framework 1 and 2) the Reichenbach’s (2002) framework
for measuring policy priority 2 .
Walt G, Gilson, L. 1994 Reforming the health sector in developing countries: The central role of
the policy analysis. Health Policy and Planning 9: 353-370.
1
3
The Walt and Gilson framework takes into account the content of policy and/or
program, the actors involved, the processes contingent on developing sector priorities
and implementing programmes as well as the context within which the priorities or
programmes are developed. We looked at the influence of the different actors, the
priority setting process, and contextual factors and how these interact to influence
priority setting in the health sector at the national and district levels. The Reichenbach’s
policy priority framework is about whether a specific health issue is receiving attention
or consideration on the policy agenda. The framework outlines three ways of
measuring attention: direct attention, process attention and political attention:
Direct attention refers to the commonly used systematic measures of RH status such
as incidence data, mortality and morbidity data, DALYS and actual costs.
Process attention covers the direct and indirect measures of social organizational
capacity to address a particular health issue, including physical resources such as
drugs, equipment, commodities and supplies, but also technical guidelines and
recommendations, treatment protocols and the number of training courses and
workshops organized for clinicians and other service providers to develop capacity
to address a health issue.
Political attention measures the extent to which groups or individuals in positions of
influence including politicians, civil servants and Ministers, NGOs – academic
organizations, women’s organizations, medical associations and the media are
engaged in advocacy and policy making, raising RH issues publicly and publishing
information.
The two frameworks were combined to provide a comprehensive approach to better
understand the priority setting processes. The combined framework was applied
retrospectively to understand:
The content of reproductive health;
The process of priority setting;
The influence of the different actors on the priority making processes; and
How these interact with the contextual factors to determine the level of attention RH
receives at the national and district levels.
2.2 Study Design
This in-depth assessment used both quantitative and qualitative methods of data
collection. The study was conducted at both the national and district levels. It included
two districts; AES in the Central region supposed to be receiving earmarked support for
Reichenbach, L. 2002 The Politics of Priority Setting for reproductive Health: Breast Cancer and
Cervical Cancer in Ghana. Reproductive Health Matters, Volume 10 Number 30, November
2002, 47 – 57.
2
4
RH from UNFPA and Ho in the Volta region that was not supposed to be receiving
earmarked funds for RH. However, after the initial data were gathered it was clear that
both districts received earmarked funds from various sources for reproductive health.
Therefore a comparative analysis of the two districts on the basis of this criterion was
not possible. Consequently, no attempt is made in this assessment to attribute
differences between the two districts to earmarked funds.
2.3 Data Collection
Data were collected through a desk appraisal of key documents, group discussions, indepth interviews with key informants directly and indirectly involved in the policy
setting process, and facility assessment.
The desk appraisal was undertaken
Table 1: Actors Interviewed
to address key questions about the
content and context of RH priority
Government
1 MOH Key Informant
setting. Several documents were
Organizations
2 GHS Key Informant
reviewed for their content in relation
1 Reproductive and
to reproductive health including
Child Health (RCH)
policy documents, district
Programme manager
development plans, annual and
Private organizations 5 NGOs in Volta
quarterly reports of the Ghana
& NGOs
Region
Health Service (GHS), aide mémoire
6 Private Health Care
for the joint review mission of the
Organizations
Government of Ghana and partners
Health Development 1 UNFPA and 1 WHO
in the health sector, annual health
Partners
Officials
sector performance reports, midRegional Directors
2 Regional Directors
term review reports for the health
District Directors
2 District Directors of
sector strategic plan, POW and
Health Services
health policy statements, program
(DDHS)
documents of international technical
Service Providers
Public and NGO
agencies and NGOs, and local
providers
publications. Budgets and
expenditure records at both district
and facility level were also reviewed to generate information on funding for health in
general and RH services specifically. Programs of local media stations and print media
were reviewed for the past five years (where possible) to assess media attention to
reproductive health concerns.
In seeking the views of individuals about priority setting in the health sector, several
actors (policy makers, program managers and service providers) at the national and
district levels were identified and interviewed from government organizations, private
5
organizations and NGOs, health development partners, technical assistance agencies,
district directors and service providers (Table 1).
The interviews elicited information on questions about the context, actors, process and
political attention. The process of carrying out key informant interviews covered a
period of two months.
Key actors from the districts were brought together in a forum to discuss issues related
to priority setting for RH within the context of SWAp in order to elicit group opinions,
attitudes, impressions, experiences and suggestions, and to observe the process of
interaction and debate between these actors. Four types of group discussions/meetings
were organized as follows: 1) 25 members of the District Health Management Teams
(DHMT) and 35 members of the Sub-district Health Management Teams (SDHMT), 2)
17 members of the District Assembly (DA), 3) 13 members of the District Health
Committees (DHC), and 4) service providers. The group discussions and/or meetings
aimed at understanding the priority setting process, context and political attention to
reproductive health concerns. A discussion guide was used covering three broad
themes including the process and context of priority setting, and political attention to
RH concerns at the district level.
A facility assessment was conducted at 41 public and private facilities in the Ho district
and 24 in the AES district that offer maternal and reproductive health services as well as
services for specific infectious diseases (sexually transmitted infections, HIV/AIDS).
The aim was to capture issues of availability of resources and support services for
different RH components, in terms of direct measurement of social and organizational
capacity to address particular RH issues, including physical resources (such as drugs,
equipment and other commodities and supplies), infrastructure, technical guidelines
and recommendations, treatment protocols, staffing and provider training.
3.0 Findings
3.1 The Content of RH in Ghana
The RH program in Ghana was adapted from the International Conference on
Population and Development held in Cairo (ICPD, 1994). Accordingly, Ghana’s
Reproductive Health Service Policy and Standards have defined reproductive health as:
“A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not
merely the absence of disease and infirmity in all aspects related to the
reproductive system and its functions and processes. Reproductive health
therefore implies that people are able to have a satisfying and safe sex life
and that they have capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide if,
when and how often to do so.”
6
The policy calls for universal access to a wide range of services and a comprehensive
package of interventions for promoting women’s health and well-being, employing a
human rights and client-centered approach within a multi-sectoral framework. The
specific components of Reproductive Health Services as spelt out in the policy are:
Safe Motherhood including antenatal, safe delivery, and postnatal care especially
breastfeeding, infant health, and women’s health;
Family Planning;
Prevention and treatment of unsafe abortion and post-abortion care;
Prevention and treatment of reproductive tract infections, including sexually
transmitted diseases and HIV/AIDS;
Prevention and treatment of infertility;
Management of cancers of the male and female reproductive tract, including the
breast;
Responding to concerns about menopause and andropause;
Discouragement of harmful traditional practices that affect the reproductive health
of men and women such as female genital mutilation; and
Information and counseling on human sexuality, responsible sexual behavior,
responsible parenthood, pre-conception care, and sexual health.
While the Policy spells out a broad package of RH, the Reproductive and Child Health
Unit (GHS) annual reports have tended to provide a more limited list of RH
components. These include:
Safe motherhood including infant health
Family planning
STI/HIV/AIDS prevention and management
Postabortion care
Prevention and management of cancers of the reproductive system.
The focus of RH in the district plans and the interviews with key stakeholders tended to
infer that an even more limited package is being delivered in reality. The common
components of reproductive heath services available at the district level were:
Safe Motherhood including antenatal, delivery and post natal care,
Family Planning, and
STI/HIV/AIDS prevention and management.
7
A service availability mapping at the
district level further reinforced the
Table 2 : Proportion of Health Facilities
limited scope of reproductive health
Offering RH Services
services in health facilities (Table 2). In
RH Component
Ho (%)
AES (%)
general health facilities in the two
N=24
N=41
districts provide post-abortion care,
Family planning
100
100
family planning, STI/HIV/AIDS and
STI/ HIV/ AIDS related
100
92
safe motherhood services. Services
services
related to the promotion and advocacy
Antenatal care
73
96
Postnatal care (breast
68
92
for sexual health and abandonment of
feeding & infant care)
harmful traditional practices are made
Delivery
54
83
available through the NGO sector.
Postabortion care
56
67
Programmes and services for the
Infertility
management of infertility, cancers and
Cancers (cervical, breast,
menopause were not available in
testicular & prostate)
either district. Special programmes
Menopause
Harmful
traditional
related to HIV/AIDS targeting
practices
adolescents were offered in almost all
Sexual
health,
facilities. However, less than 5 percent
parenthood, and preof the facilities in both districts offered
conceptual care
programs targeting adolescents for
antenatal care, postnatal care, STI and family planning.
3.2 Context for RH Services
Ghana initiated health sector reforms (HSR) in the 1980s in response to weak
management systems, uncoordinated, fragmented and competing donor driven project
support. The HSR were then described as “a sustained process of fundamental changes in
national health policy and institutional arrangements, guided by government and designed to
improve the functioning and performance of the health sector and ultimately, the health status of
the population (Akosa et al, 2003). The HSR were guided by five over-arching principles:
integration, decentralization, partnerships, ownership, and common financing (Addai
and Gaere, 2001). From the interviews and documents reviewed, the key reform
elements influencing reproductive health priority setting were reforms in
decentralization, service delivery and financing.
3.2.1 Decentralization reforms
A major institutional reform under HSR has been decentralization, involving the
transfer of decision-making authority and management of health services from the
central ministry of health to regional and district levels. The health sector’s
decentralization programme was further reinforced in 1997 with the establishment of
the Ghana Health Service (GHS) as an agency of Government responsible for service
delivery. The Ministry of Health is responsible for stewardship of the entire health
8
sector including policy formulation, resource mobilization and allocation, coordination,
monitoring and evaluation.
Under the decentralized arrangement, the Ministry of Health determines the policies
and priorities for the health sector and communicates them to the Ghana Health Service
and other relevant Partners. The Ghana Health Service then develops policy
implementation guidelines for the regions and districts. The regions then coordinate the
development of district plans and provide supportive supervision to districts to
implement the plans. Districts are mandated to develop and implement operational
plans in line with national policy and priorities.
To reinforce the decentralization programme, District Health Management Teams
(DHMT), led by a public health physician, have been established in all districts to plan,
implement, monitor and coordinate service delivery. Financial management has also
been decentralized through the creation of Budget Management Centers (BMC).
District health management teams were found to have flexibility in decisions on how to
allocate funds to activities including reproductive health activities based on the
prevailing evidence and the expressed needs of staff and other service providers.
District directors also have the authority to make transfers within budget lines and push
money to support specific programmes. Furthermore, districts have the authority to
mobilize additional funds from donors and to collaborate with others to carry out RH
activities.
The key challenge to decentralization is ensuring that districts provide adequate
attention to national priorities in their programmes. This challenge is mitigated through
a combination of effective and participatory leadership at the district level and guidance
from the regional and central level. Further, districts are held accountable to national
priorities by requiring them to report on the sector wide indicators and targets, which
include those for reproductive health.
3.2.2 Service delivery reforms
Decentralization of health services went hand in hand with attempts to move from
vertical projects and programmes to an integrated form of service delivery. In line with
this approach, the MOH defined a package of interventions to be delivered by the
network of health institutions. Maternal and Reproductive Health Services are included
in the list of priority health interventions defined in the POW. The specific role of each
level of health services in the provision of reproductive health services is further
specified in the reproductive policy and standards.
The management support systems including systems for procurement and financial
management have also been re-organized functionally to support the integrated
delivery of health services. For example, under a vertical programme, the headquarters
9
was responsible for managing the cadre of staff, procurement and distribution of
essential logistics and also for planning and implementation of health programmes and
services.
Following the adoption of the decentralized integrated services, District Health
Management Teams (DHMT) became responsible for the planning, organizing,
implementing, monitoring and reporting on an integrated package of health programs
and services. The DHMT are allocated budgets for procurement of inputs for the
implementation of district health plans. DHMT are also responsible for aspects of the
management of human resources including posting and performance management, but
excluding hiring and firing (MOH, 1998).
The challenge of integration is ensuring attention to the individual programmes as
entities within the health sector. Even though all programmes share this concern, the
organization of service delivery within institutions seems to minimize this threat for
some components of the reproductive health package. For instance, all the public health
facilities have maternal health units responsible for the provision of family planning
and safe motherhood services. These units are expected to ensure continuous attention
to these components of reproductive health in the planning and delivery of health
services. However, there are no units focusing on infertility, cancers, menopause,
andropause, advocacy against harmful traditional practices and for sexual health. By
implication these services have been integrated into oblivion in both districts.
3.2.3 Financing reforms
Ghana has been implementing a number of financing reforms aimed at increasing
overall resources to the health sector and ensuring equitable allocation. These reforms
include the introduction of user fees and related exemption policy and the sector wide
approach. Ghana is presently introducing a national health insurance scheme whose
primary objective is to replace user fees.
User Fees, Exemption Policy and Health Insurance Scheme
The Government of Ghana introduced user fees into the public health system in 1983.
The user fees were intended to fill the financing gap in the provision of comprehensive
health services and contribute to improving quality of health services. The user fee
policy covers the cost of clinical care including consultations, drugs, non-drug
consumables and admissions. All maternal health services provided in public health
institutions, with the exception of immunization of pregnant women against tetanus
and family planning, attracted user fees under this policy.
To reduce the financial barriers to services while retaining the positive elements of user
fees, an exemption scheme was instituted alongside the user fees (GHS, 2003). The key
elements of the exemption policy are to promote the use of services of public health
importance that might otherwise be used suboptimally while concurrently minimizing
10
the cost of care to the poor. Government prioritized the delivery of safe motherhood
services and provided exemptions for antenatal care and deliveries in addition to family
planning and immunization.
At the time of the study, Ghana was introducing a national health insurance
scheme. It is anticipated that the health insurance scheme will replace both the
user fees and exemptions. The goal of the scheme is to assure universal access for
all residents in Ghana to an acceptable quality package of health services,
including RH services. The National Health Insurance scheme provides for the
delivery of health services at the district level. The minimum benefit package to
be provided under the NHIS includes the following RH interventions:
Antenatal care
Deliveries
Postnatal care
Caesarian section
Postnatal care
Management of emergency obstetric and gynecological conditions
Breast cancer and cervical cancer management
Management of STI/HIV/AIDS (excluding ART)
Though family planning, confirmatory HIV/AIDS testing and immunization are not
included in the benefit package under the National Health Insurance Scheme, they will
be provided free of charge to clients through the government’s public health
programmes. Treatment for Infertility, menopause, andropause, anti-retroviral therapy
and male reproductive cancers are excluded from both the NHIS benefit package and
the public health financing. The package is also silent on PMTCT even though a broader
definition of the ANC and delivery packages could include PMTCT.
Sector-Wide Approaches (SWAp)
In 1997, Ghana adopted the SWAp to health delivery. Under this approach, the
Government and Development Partners agreed to a common POW, pooled funding,
and common management arrangement. The Ministry of Health also institutionalized a
policy dialogue with partners.
The Programme of Work
The underlying feature of the health SWAp is for all partners in the sector to work
towards a common vision. A five-year POW (5YPOW) 2002-2006 has been developed
and agreed to between the Ministry of Health and development partners. The 5YPOW
spells out the vision, priorities, strategies, targets, resource envelope, and resource
allocation criteria for the sector. The POW has five strategic objectives called strategic
pillars which are to: 1) improve quality of health delivery; 2) increase access to health
services; 3) improve efficiency of health service delivery; 4) foster partnership in
improving health and; 5) improve financing of the health sector.
11
The POW is a result of information gathering,
Priority Health Intervention,
studies, and nationwide consultations with key
POW 2002-2006
providers, consumers, civil society groups,
development partners, and Government
HIV/AIDS/STI
stakeholders. The POW outlines ten priority
Malaria
health interventions including reproductive
Tuberculosis
Guinea worm
health. These have been designated priorities
Poliomyelitis
because of their potential or actual impact on
Reproductive, maternal and
health or because of the disparities in health
child health
outcomes between regions. Others have been
Accident and emergencies
selected because they are targeted for
Non-communicable disease
eradication or because of their impact on
Oral health and eye care
household resources, particularly for the poor.
Specialist services including
To a great extent, the focus, priorities and targets
psychiatric care
have been influenced by the Government’s
response to the development agenda as spelt out
in the Ghana Poverty Reduction Strategy (GPRS). The GRPS highlights three priority
objectives for the health sector:
Bridging equity in access to quality health and nutrition services
Ensuring sustainable financing arrangements that protect the poor and
Enhancing efficiency in service delivery.
The GRPS further recognizes that health, and specifically HIV/AIDS are affected by
actions of a range of other sectors. It also draws attention to the need to target
vulnerable and excluded groups (such as women, children, disabled, elderly and people
living with HIV/AIDS) with basic services.
The POW also aims to respond to key international development targets that Ghana has
signed on to, such as the MDGs, the ICPD, and the Abuja declaration. Indeed, these
targets have been translated into national targets and have further been translated into
regional and district level targets to guide/inform local priority setting in a
decentralized system.
Each year the Ministry and Health Partners develop an annual POW that captures the
priorities for a particular year. The annual POW is developed after a review of progress
made in the implementation of the 5YPOW. A review of the annual POW (2002 – 2005)
shows that RH has been a national priority every year. A number of policy
interventions relevant to RH have been introduced incrementally in the POW. These
are exemptions on deliveries, a budget line for contraceptives to ensure contraceptive
security, HIV/AIDS and an adolescent health program.
12
Funding arrangements
Another component of the SWAp is the pooling of funds to support implementation of
the POW. Currently, six of the fifteen official donors in the health sector have pooled
funds. These are DANIDA, DfID, European Union, Netherlands, UNFPA and World
Bank. In 2004, 58.9 percent (70.34 million USD) of the total expected donor inflows from
development partners were pooled (MOH, 2004).
All development partners in the health sector, including those pooling funds, also
earmark funds to support the POW. In 2004, about 14.6 percent of the total earmarked
funds were from Partners that had also pooled funds. The major partners earmarking
funds to support reproductive health activities are UNFPA, USAID, UNICEF and
WHO. The UN agencies use the Ministry of Health systems for disbursement of funds,
whilst USAID manages its own funds.
The health sector resource envelope as captured in the POW includes funding
from the Government of Ghana, donors (both pooled and earmarked), Internally
Generated Funds 3 and inflows from Highly Indebted Poor Country Initiative
(HIPC). All sources of funds except earmarked funds are included in the
allocations to the district for planning. A needs-based criterion is used to allocate
funds to districts based on district population, nearness to regional capital,
district deprivation, number of health facilities, district disease burden, as well as
hospital utilization. Earmarked funds are not included because it is usually
difficult to predict their disbursement. Districts develop specific proposals to
access earmarked funds during implementation.
Funding for RH comes from all the four sources of funds including earmarked funds,
channeled through GHS or going directly to the districts. The experience with
earmarking funds within the health sector is mixed. First, there is feeling among senior
program managers that RH could lose out from pooling of funds and for that reason
earmarked funding for RH should continue. The main reason for this is the delay in
government disbursement and procurement procedures. Secondly, other senior
managers at the national level felt that earmarked funding for RH did not influence
priority setting at the national level; instead earmarked funds tend to distort the
funding arrangements and resource flow at the lower level. Overall, the impression was
that RH is benefiting from the combination of earmarked and pooled funding
arrangements.
The context of the health SWAp is, however, changing. At the time of the study, the
Government had instituted multi-donor budget support mechanisms with development
partners considering using budget support as the instrument for support to the sectors.
3
Funds generated from user fees in facilities
13
Budget support is a form of quick disbursing programme aid which is channeled
directly to government, using local accounting systems and is linked to sector or
national policies rather than specific project activities. The debate about budget support
is a macro-level one and mainly focuses on how to allocate resources between sectors to
achieve the national development goals and international targets that Ghana has signed
on to, rather than allocation within a particular sector.
The concern among senior managers within the health sector is that the sector may lose
out under the budget support system. However, the Ghana Poverty Reduction Strategy,
the 2005 Presidential Sessional address and the 2005 Budget statement to Parliament
identify health as a key priority of Government that would continue to attract attention.
For example in 2005, Government projected to spend about 15 percent of the recurrent
budget on health. Government is also committed to maintaining the integrity of the
health SWAp at least in the medium term.
The implications of the changing financing context on the health sector and RH in
particular as seen by managers is for the health sector to improve its negotiation with
the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning to sustain (or increase) funding under
budget support to the sector. Concurrently, the resource allocation within the sector
needs to be improved to ensure that priorities are adequately funded.
Common management arrangements
A common management arrangement and code of practice have been agreed to
between the Ministry of Health and the donors pooling funds within the sector. Under
this arrangement, partners contributing to the health fund agree to use government
systems for disbursements, procurement and accounting for funds. These systems are
also extended to earmarked funds that are allocated through the Ministry to the
districts.
Some development partners interviewed felt that donors earmarking funds should use
parallel systems for disbursements, procurement, accounting and reporting. On one
hand, donor managed systems tend to be faster and more responsive to programme
requirements such as procurement of equipment, supplies and logistics, as well as to
donor accountability requirements. Unless explicitly included in proposals, the
implementation of programmes under donor earmarked funding arrangements does
not contribute to strengthening the capacity of the health system. Conversely, they
sometimes undermine systems development and tend to increase the transaction cost.
Policy Dialogue
The policy dialogue established under the SWAp creates the platform for
identifying sector priorities. The MOH and its partners have agreed to and
institutionalized arrangements for policy dialogue. The dialogue includes
monthly partners’ meetings, quarterly business meetings and half yearly
14
summits. The monthly partners’ meetings and quarterly business meetings are
for reflections and updating Partners on progress in implementation
arrangements. The summits endorse the POW, and monitor progress to identify
priorities and allocate resources. Through the policy dialogue, the health sector
has engaged a wide range of stakeholders in the development and
implementation of the health sector plans. The outcome has been a Program of
Work (POW) that many stakeholders can identify with (Enyimayew, 2003).
3.3 Priority Setting – Process and Actors
3.3.1 National level priority setting
National priorities for the health sector are set by the Ministry of Health and health
partners at the health summit and expressed in the POW and aide mémoire. The
summit brings together key stakeholders in the health sector and is the time when the
principals of development partners come into the country to participate in sector policy
dialogue. The health summit has four broad components.
The first summit of the year is the review summit. It is held after a comprehensive
review of the POW. This review has three parts. The first is the internal and self review
of the contribution of each Budget Management Center to achievement of the targets in
the sector. All districts review their achievements against targets and organize
performance hearings. The first summit also includes a field component to provide the
principals the opportunity to interact with key health managers at the local level so as
to understand and contextualize program implementation issues to be discussed during
the meetings.
The second component of the summit is the scientific session. This session provides a
forum presenting and discussing research papers and in-depth reviews that are relevant
to the theme of the summit and answering specific questions related to the
implementation of the POW. Each year about three to four thematic areas of strategic
importance to the implementation of the POW are identified and reviewed. Our
findings confirm that RH is among the themes that have been presented and discussed.
For example in 2004, an in-depth review into the health sector response to maternal
mortality was commissioned. Other reviews included health sector performance as an
analysis of DHS, contraceptive prevalence study and repositioning family planning. In
2005, an in-depth review of how district plans respond to the national level priorities
was commissioned.
The third component is the program review session, which focuses on discussing the
POW, its strategies, priorities and sector performance. All the above three components
are open to all invited stakeholders including GHS headquarters staff, regional
directors, other sector ministry representatives, development partners, coalition of NGO
15
representatives, and private practitioner representatives. This team synthesizes the
reports of the first and second reviews and presents recommendations that are
negotiated at the summit.
The last component of the health summit is the business meeting, which is
attended by delegates of the MOH and funding partners. It is at the business
meetings that sector priorities are negotiated and agreed to after drawing on the
body of evidence and discussions that have emerged from the earlier three
components. The agreements in the business meeting are summarized into an
aide mémoire that is endorsed and signed by the MOH and only health partners
pooling funds. In other words the MOH and health partners that pool funds are
the ones who make the final decisions regarding sector priorities. Some national
level respondents were of the view that:
“Partners are more interested in global priorities being translated into
national priorities”.
Until a year ago, there was no advocate for reproductive health signing the aide
mémoire, simply because such representatives were not invited. However, this
situation has changed with UNFPA signing the aide mémoire and beginning to
influence the decisions of the summit significantly. In October 2003 UNFPA
commissioned a study on UNFPA’s role in health SWAp in Ghana. The study
recommended that UNFPA should engage more actively in the health SWAp.
Since then, UNFPA’s participation in the SWAp has been increasing. In 2004
UNFPA contributed funds to the health fund, i.e. UNFPA joined the pooling
funding arrangement, and by implication became an active participant in the
health policy dialogue.
Currently UNFPA is member of the planning committee that determines the
agenda for the health summit; UNFPA sits at the business meetings and also
participates in negotiating and signing of the aide mémoire. In 2004 UNFPA
worked with the MOH and other partners to commission a study on the health
sector’s response to maternal mortality. Thus, UNFPA’s role in the sector
dialogue has contributed to the increased attention paid to RH issues. An aide
mémoire review showed that reproductive health (apart from HIV/AIDS) did not
feature in any aide mémoire prior to 2004. However, 2004 was the turning point
for reproductive health focus/attention, where specific summit
recommendations stated the:
Training of community health officers to provide midwifery services (June
2004)
Strengthening of services related to STI and condom use (Dec 2004)
Strengthening of MCH and EOC services (June 2004)
16
Consequently, the attention being given to reproductive health during the
summit and reflected in the aide mémoire has increased in the last two years.
3.3.2 District level priority setting
District level priorities are determined during the annual planning and budgeting
process, which involves three steps:
Ministry of health issues guidelines for planning. Typically the guidelines include
the sector priorities and targets, resource envelope and budget ceilings and tools and
process for planning. The guidelines are developed after reviewing the lessons from
the review of the annual POW, progress made towards achieving targets defined in
the five-year POW, and the overall development priorities of government.
Cascading planning workshops are then organized at the national, regional and
district levels to orientate managers in the priorities for the year and in the tools and
process for planning.
Each district then develops its plan in line with the guidelines from the Ministry of
Health and after taking account of the district’s own peculiarities. The district plans
are then peer reviewed at the regional level and then consolidated into a national
plan.
During the planning process, districts review the various components of service
delivery such as clinical care, public health services including reproductive health as
well as essential support services. Districts also review progress and challenges in the
previous year, define district targets in the light of national priorities and targets,
identify activities to be implemented and cost these activities.
The key stakeholders in district priority setting are:
District Chief Executive and District Assembly responsible for political
administration of the district
District Health Management Team responsible for coordination of health activities
and management of the district health budget
Providers of health services, both public and private providers, including NGOs
Civil society including chiefs and elders of the district
However, in both study districts, the District Health Management Team is responsible
for setting the health priorities of the districts. The process is almost limited to staff of
the Ghana Health Service with little or no opportunity for the participation of district
assemblies, civil society, NGOs and private providers in the priority setting process
operating at the district level. As stated by one district assembly member:
“We are on the ground and know all the problems that occur here.
Therefore our voices should be heard, but this does not happen.”
17
Focus group discussions with members of the District Health Committees of the Ghana
Health Service revealed that they had recently been established in both districts and did
not seem to have played a major role in determining district priorities. For example, the
Ho district health committee members said they were new, no Terms of Reference had
been given to them, their role had not been clarified to them, and they had not met since
their inauguration over a year ago. Similarly, the AES committee said they have not
participated in any DHMT meeting where priorities are set, and had not met the District
Director of Health Services since their inauguration over a year ago. When asked
whether they knew of the POW, both committees said they had not seen the health
sector POW.
Consequently, priority setting for health at the district level heavily depends on the
group dynamics within the District Health Management Team rather than other actors.
In this interaction, the public health nurse is the key advocate on reproductive health
issues. FGDs with district assemblies, district health committees and NGOs revealed
that they play minimal role in setting priorities.
3.3.3 What influences the selection of priorities at the district level?
National priorities for the health sector are set by the MOH at the Health Partners
Summit and expressed in the POW and aide mémoire that come out of the summit. Even
though it is the intention of the MOH to involve all stakeholders in the summit and thus
in setting of priorities, in reality this does not happen. The participation of the district
managers and indeed other stakeholders such as NGOs, private sector, professional
groups, members of parliament and select committees on health has been very limited.
The summit, however, draws on the body of evidence emerging from the annual review
process. Consequently, the key stakeholders determining the national priorities are the
MOH, their Development Partners and the GHS. The business meeting of the summit is
where the decisions on priorities are negotiated.
Interviews with district managers show that three main factors influence priority setting
at the district level. The most common influence mentioned was national level priority,
followed by district level peculiarities and then the amount of earmarked funds
available.
National Level Priorities
National level priorities drive district priorities. According to the district respondents,
priorities are determined at the national level and then they become district level
priorities. When asked whether national level priorities were acceptable to districts,
district managers in both districts stated that national level priorities were very
acceptable. In the words of one senior manager:
18
“Priorities are determined for us from above and because we are part of
the health sector funded by government we have to take them on.”
However, several respondents at the district level were concerned that they do not
influence the process of setting national priorities. The general feeling among district
managers is that participation in national priority setting is selective and minimal. As
stated by one district director:
“District Directors don’t sit with national level Directors at a round table
any say let’s look at priorities for the year. Even at the national and
regional annual reviews they do not call on all of us but select one or two
from districts where they may have special interest. … Therefore, even at
that level, not all of us are represented. Most people will feel they are
involved if they attend stakeholder meetings where everyone is brought on
board to contribute but in reality this does not happen”
The involvement of the district directors in the health summit where national priorities
are determined was described as indirect and limited to submission of sub-district and
district annual report that get consolidated into the sector review report that forms the
basis for discussions during the health summit.
Local Level Peculiarities
Local challenges also influence the district priorities. Respondents indicated that some
of their priorities came directly from the districts, which they serve, and are added on to
national priorities. In situations where district level priorities conflict with national
priorities, the national priorities take precedence over district priorities. Where the
national priorities are not problems within the districts, districts exclude such priorities
from their list of priorities. One district director’s view;
“National and regional (priorities) are important but they don’t override
our district specific priorities. Even if my district has priorities that are
not highlighted at the national level I have the mandate to add them on to
mine as a District Director, because my mandate is to improve the health
status of the people in my district. The onus of responsibility would be to
commit resources to that area and I think I will be justified in doing that.”
Districts adapt national priorities to their situation after reviewing them for relevance to
their local context. In the words of one district manager:
“When they bring national priorities, you ask yourself, these things they
are talking about, how do they affect us? Do we have any problem in that
area? For example, if there is a national priority…. And you don’t have
that problem, what you do is look out for it … so your job would mainly be
19
surveillance. If it is a problem in your district, then you draw an itinerary
to curb it.”
Earmarked Funds
UNFPA has been providing earmarked funds to support reproductive health through
its AYA project to the Central Region but not to the Volta Region. As a result, only one
of the study districts (AES) benefited from earmarked funds.
Respondents from the AES district commented that earmarked funds from UNFPA for
Reproductive Health:
Arean important source of funding for RH activities; even though the proportion of
earmarked funds received by the district is small compared to the total budget,
earmarked funds are an addition to the budget and by their very nature are
available to support implementation;
Serve to boost sexual and reproductive health services within the decentralized
system, as they tend to focus on specific programme activities such as training
Influence priority setting and resource allocation at the district level by ensuring that
more attention is given to RH activities at the district level.
Earmarked funds also take key managers away from other priorities. As lamented by
one district manager:
“Of course earmarked funds influence priority setting, they come and
sway us off other priorities.”
There was also a concern by district managers that the flow of earmarked funds was too
unpredictable making it very difficult to implement programmes. Earmarked funds
were also blamed for being fragmented, to the extent that it compromised on-going
integrated programmes. The overall view was that earmarked funds drive planned
programmes out of balance. For this reason some district managers are reluctant to
accept earmarked funds. As remarked by one manager:
“The way things are moving here, should anybody come and say they
want to do A, I personally will be able to say I can’t now, but can I have
the money to do B or go and wait and come back…. I am not afraid to
refuse funds.”
At the regional level, managers argued that they do not see a clear contribution of the
earmarked funds to performance. Their concern was that earmarked funds did not
necessarily translate into better health outcomes as the difference in service outputs
between the districts with and without was not significant.
20
3.4 Is reproductive health receiving attention at the district level?
The study sought to establish empirically whether reproductive health was receiving
adequate attention at the district level. The starting point was to determine whether
district managers perceived RH to be a problem and if so to assess the attention
accorded reproductive health in the district. Specifically, the study assessed the
attention given to reproductive health at the district level from the following
dimensions:
Do district managers perceive RH to be a problem?
What is the place of RH on the list of district priorities?
How much attention do the media in the district give to RH?
Is the RH programme adequately resourced?
What is the capacity of districts to deliver RH services?
3.4.1 Is RH a perceived problem at the district level?
It is generally assumed that people will do something about things they believe to be
problems. Related to this, managers were asked whether they perceived RH to be a
problem. Table 3 summarizes the consensus position from in-depth interviews with
regional and focused group discussions with District and Sub-district health
management teams.
Table 3: Regional, District and Sub- District Managers’ Perceptions of
Reproductive Health Problems
Components
Volta
Region
Ho
District
Antenatal care
+
_
Safe delivery
+
+
Postnatal care/ breast
+
_
feeding & infant care
Family planning
+
_
STI/ HIV/ AIDS
+
_
Unsafe abortion and
+
+
post abortion care
_
+
Infertility
Cancers
(cervical,
_
+
breast, testicular and
prostate cancers)
Menopause
+
_
Harmful traditional
+
_
practices
+
_
Sexual
health,
parenthood, & preconceptual care
(+) A perceived problem and (–) is not a problem
Winneba
Sub-district
Tsito
Sub-district
Kpetoe
Sub-district
Kasoa
Sub-district
_
_
+
+
+
+
_
+
+
_
_
_
_
+
_
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
_
+
-
_
_
_
_
+
+
_
-
+
+
+
+
_
+
_
+
-
_
21
All implementers consider STI and HIV/AIDS to be problems;
Most implementers consider safe delivery, postnatal care and family planning,
unsafe abortion and postabortion care to be problems; and
Less than half of implementers consider menopause, infertility, human sexuality
and harmful traditional practices to be problems.
The study also sought to determine how problems were defined within the districts. For
example:
In the Kasoa sub-district, ANC, PNC and safe delivery are not perceived to be
problems because the sub-district providers have been trained in safe motherhood.
The Kasoa sub-district team sees few teenagers coming in for post-abortion care and
therefore do not think post abortion care is a problem. Conversely, FGM, which is
commonly seen among immigrants in the community, is considered a problem.
In Tsitoe and Kpetoe sub-districts, teenage pregnancies and illegal abortions are
problems because they are observed in clinics.
From the HMIS reports in Ho, safe motherhood, and abortions and postabortion
care are problems while breastfeeding is not.
In Winneba sub-district, HIV is a problem because the prevalence is about 5.4%, and
teenage pregnancy is declining because of the presence of counselors in the district.
Generally, cancers and infertility are not problems because not too many cases are
seen or picked up by the facilities either because health education campaigns have
not been mounted or the caliber of staff at the sub-district and district levels does not
have the capacity to diagnose them.
District and sub-district managers mentioned the use of data such as disease
prevalence, ANC, PNC and supervised delivery coverage rates to inform their selection
of problems.
3.4.2 The position of reproductive health in the list of district priorities
Again regional, district and sub-district implementers were asked whether they have
their “own” priorities and how reproductive health featured in these priorities.
All districts reported to have their “own” priorities. In Ho, the district priorities
included leishmaniasis, child survival, supervised deliveries, and stemming the brain
drain of health workers. In AES, the priority is to increase access to services including
access to obstetric emergency care. Other priorities included increasing community
awareness to RH and improving the skills of TBA.
When asked whether RH is an important priority, regional, district and sub-district
managers unanimously said that RH significantly features in their priorities. According
to one respondent:
22
“RH is very important because if you want to determine the health status
of an area, all you need to do is just look at maternal health. From looking
at reproductive health and maternal health you can tell if a district is
healthy or not.”
A review of the district plans confirmed that RH featured extensively in public health
programmes, where planned activities include adolescent reproductive health, maternal
mortality, family planning, TT2, neonatal health, baby friendly institutions, Vitamin A,
STI/HIV/AIDS control, malaria control and health education. District managers,
however, expressed concerns over the fact that even though RH deserved and received
attention in their district it covered a broad range of services/components.
3.4.3 Do the media give attention to RH?
Both study districts had radio stations i.e. Volta Star Radio in Ho and Radio Peace FM
in Winneba. The radio programmes are intended to reach as many communities and
individuals as possible in and around the districts with a package of valuable health
messages. The object of these presentations was to enable individuals to make informed
choices and decisions about their health. The content of the radio programmes in both
districts was, therefore, reviewed to determine the attention given to RH issues.
Over the period 2001-2004, the media in both districts presented a total of 137
reproductive health topics; 41 of these were aired by Volta Star Radio in Ho district and
96 aired on Radio Peace FM in AES district. Depending of availability of theme experts
and radio presenters, health programmes were broadcasted weekly and bi-weekly in
Ho and AES, respectively. Some of the topics featuring on radio include:
AIDS prevention
Abortion and postabortion care
Life choices on family planning
Safe Motherhood
Malaria control in pregnancy using IPT
Adolescent health programme
STI management
Information on human sexuality, responsible sexual behavior and sexual health
Abnormal vaginal bleeding
Vasectomy
In 2004, the Central Regional health directorate also organized press conferences for 12
journalists covering Family Planning, Life Choices and Safe Motherhood. This was to
equip the print and electronic media with vital health information to enable them help
educate the masses on issues bordering on public health activities.
23
3.4.4 Is the RH programme adequately resourced?
The overall health sector budget for 2004 was 1,449,461,999,999 Cedis (Annual POW
2004; 9,000 Cedis = $1). Budget allocations are included in the Table 4. Funding for
service delivery including RH services falls under the Ghana Health Services budget to
the districts, which just a proportion of the 68.9 percent is allocated. Of this, 7.6 percent
was retained at the GHS Head Quarters, 9.2 percent went to the Regional Health
Services (RHS), 5.95 percent to psychiatric hospitals and 46.45 percent
(457,264,210,676) went to the district health services; shared among 138 districts across
Ghana.
Table 4: Health Sector Budget Allocation –2004
Levels
Actual
Percentage
Ghana Health Services
639,259,608,276
Ministry of Health
575,303,836,553
Teaching Hospitals*
131,396,456,771
Training Schools
68,119,442,556
Subvented organizations
26,977,635,602
Innovations fund
1,404,525,095
Civil servants exemptions
7,000,495,146
Total Health
1,449,461,999,999
*Tamale (9.3%), Komfo Anokye (6.6%) and Korle Bu (4.3%)
68.89
11.13
9.53
5.91
2.81
0.29
1.44
100
However, the district health plans do not provide disaggregated data on budget
allocation and expenditure across programmes. Instead, the plan is organized around
the five strategic objectives of the health sector and the budget is summarized by line
items i.e. by allocation to human resources (item 1), administration (item 2), service
(item 3), and investments (item 4). It was, therefore, not possible to determine the
proportion of the district budget allocated to reproductive health activities. However,
it can only be anticipated that overall resource allocation to service delivery including
RH as a proportion of health sector budget is rather small.
Non-central sources of funding are limited at the district level and include funds from
the District Assemblies Common fund (DACF), CBOs and NGOs. Actual budgets for
NGOs and CBOs were not available but a sizable number of existing NGOs in the
districts were delivering services in RH. In Ho district, 5 of the 20 NGOs were
delivering RH services and 3 of the 5 NGOs and 15 CBOs in the AES district were doing
the same. The two districts also reported receiving direct donor support in kind
(contraceptives, test-kits, and vehicles for supervision).
User fees are an additional source of funds at the district level and are included in the
health sector budgets. Fees go into revolving drug funds and contribute about 20% of
total spending at the district level. Although income from user fees is small, it does
enhance decentralized decision-making since it remains under district and facility
24
jurisdiction. The study could also not estimate the proportion of user fees collected from
the provision of Reproductive Health Services. This is because the financial report does
not indicate the sources of user fees by programmes.
Service utilization was nonetheless used as a proxy indicator of the effort that goes into
reproductive health services. The proportion of in-service training allocated to
reproductive health issues was also reviewed as a proxy for the relative investments in
RH. Over half of outpatient and inpatient services offered in both Ho and AES district
during the period (2001 – 2004) were reproductive health-related (Table 5).
Table 5: Reproductive Health Service Utilization and In-Service Training at the
District Level (2001-2004)
2001
RH service utilization as a
proportion of in &
outpatient
Total of number of trainings
per district/year
Proportion of RH training
per district/year
Total number of health staff
trained
Proportion of RH staff
benefiting from training
Ho District
2002
2003
2004
2001
AES District
2002
2003
2004
40%
50%
60%
64%
41%
50%
53%
60%
7
2
(29%)
122
5
3
(60%)
91
12
6
(50%)
313
10
3
(30%)
60
3
2
(75%)
85
2
0
25
2
1
50%
55
8
8
100%
280
25
(20%)
62
(68%)
36
(12%)
28
(47%)
60
(70%)
-
32
(38%)
136
(49%)
Similarly, the majority of the in-service training programmes on RH targeted RH staff.
This implies that a substantial proportion of the time of service providers and, by
extension, recurrent component of the health budget at the district level is spent on
reproductive health services/activities. In the two study districts, district directors have
the authority to mobilize funds outside the regular budget for RH activities. However,
this is neither structured nor has the district got the skills to do so. For example, 5
percent of the District Assembly Common Fund (DACF) has been earmarked for the
health sector, representing an additional source of funding for health. District Health
Management Teams must apply for this on a competitive basis with other sector
ministries. None of the two districts have been able to access the DACF. There was the
view among district directors that the DA does not see health as a priority. A district
director’s comment was:
“For health to become a priority it has to have a political flavor”.
There was also another view that success in receiving an allocation depends on
individual lobbying ability of the district director: Members of the DA social services
25
subcommittee on health, however, expressed dissatisfaction with the DHMT in not
doing enough lobbying work:
“Interaction and early awareness
creation is important, since the
DHMT set their priorities first, they
should rope them into ours and get us
convinced that this is very important.
We want them to lobby. All sectors
need to lobby for the DACF, if the
health man will not come and tell us
there is a looming epidemic we will not
see it as a priority. Currently the
health sector does not involve us much
and does not lobby us much.”
District directors in the two districts were
not able to mobilize funds outside the
regular budget and they claimed it was
not easy accessing these funds. However,
other districts not included in this study
were reported to have accessed these
funds. Clearly, there is room for accessing
local funds so regional and district
managers should explore all options.
3.4.5 What is the capacity of districts to
deliver RH services?
The study assessed existing capacity of
health facilities to deliver RH services. A
scale was used, where the mean score of
each service was compared against a
minimum and maximum score. The scale
includes four major capacity measures;
supplies/drugs, equipment, protocols
and guidelines. These capacity measures
were assessed for each RH component.
An overall score of 118 was derived after
aggregating the individual score for each
item in the facility assessment
questionnaire (Annex 1).
Table 6: Facility Capacity to Deliver
Reproductive Health Services
RH services
ANC
Drugs (Score 0-5)
Equipment (score 0-11)
Protocols (Score 0-5)
Lab supplies (Score 0-7)
Max. score ANC(28)
STI
Drugs (Score 0-7)
Protocols (Score 0-7)
Lab supplies (Score 0-6)
Max. score STI (20)
HIV
Drugs (ART) (Score 0-4)
Protocols (Score 0-5)
Lab. supplies (Score 0-6)
Max Score HIV (15)
FP
Commodities
(Score 0-10)
IEC materials
(Score 0-6)
Equipment (Score 0-4)
Max. score FP (20)
Delivery
Supplies & drugs
(Score 0-19)
Baby supplies (0-6)
Assisted Delivery
Supplies (Score 0-8)
Delivery protocols
(Score 0-2)
Max. score Delivery(35)
Total Score (0- 118)
Ho
N=41
AES
N=24
2.49
5.98
0.88
1.27
10.62
3.29
8.83
1.21
3.08
16.41
1.36
3.56
0.60
5.52
1.40
2.50
0
3.90
0.00
0.56
0.07
0.63
0.04
0.75
0.38
1.17
5.88
4.33
4.15
2.83
2.71
12.74
3.75
10.91
8.71
15.96
1.93
0.56
2.54
0.75
0.3
0.75
11.5
41.01
20.
52.39
26
Our findings (Table 6) show that capacity is very limited even though the majority of
facilities reported to offer a range of RH services. The total mean score for Ho and AES
was 41.01 and 52.39 respectively.
Extremely weak capacity was found in the area of HIV/AIDS. None of the three
hospitals in both study districts had Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART). Only one private
clinic provided ART. Availability of STI drugs was also found to be limited. Similarly,
availability of laboratory supplies was extremely limited. The score for laboratory
supplies for STI tests was close to zero out of a maximum score of seven. The score for
supplies for HIV testing was equally bad for both districts (0.07 and 0.38; the maximum
score was 6). The availability of protocols and guidelines was also found to be
extremely low for all RH components. Capacity for cancers and infertility was not
assessed since these services were generally not available.
4.0 Discussion and Conclusion
This study sought to answer three key questions:
Is RH a priority at the district level?
Is there a harmony or discrepancy between national and district level RH priorities?
Does HSR facilitate or constrain priority setting for RH at the district level?
The study confirms that reproductive health is a “stated” priority at both the national
and district levels. Priority setting is essentially driven at the national level. The study
suggests that the national level sets priorities and districts implement them. The sector
priorities are determined at the health summits by key partners signing the aide mémoire.
Evidence on reproductive health issues is discussed during the summits but the
decisions on priorities are negotiated during the business meetings and by partners
signing the aide mémoire.
Health sector reforms in Ghana tend to support and reinforce a focus on the RH
package at the district level in three ways. First, the organization of services in health
institutions makes the provision of RH almost mandatory since all health institutions at
the district have RH/FP units that are responsible for safe motherhood and family
planning services. This institutional arrangement ensures that reproductive health
services stand out as a separate entity even in the integrated approach to health services
in the country.
Second, the sector-wide approach adopted key RH indicators that form the basis for
assessing sector-wide performance and ensuring accountability at the district level. For
that reason the discourse at the sector level covers both RH service delivery and
systems development. It is assumed under these circumstances that HSR in Ghana
should lead to the delivery of RH interventions. However, our findings suggest that
27
HSR are not translating into service delivery because of inadequate capacity in terms of
drugs, supplies, equipment and service protocols.
Third, financing reforms did not discriminate in favor of RH services; nevertheless since
the late nineties the country has been introducing exemptions that have increasingly
focused on ANC and supervised delivery. This is to be reinforced under the NHIS
programme.
Ghana is, however, currently facing the challenge of harmonizing a comprehensive
definition of RH and the reality of selective implementation at the district level. There is
therefore a gap between the RH components as stated in the national policy and the
components available at the district level.
The reality districts face is that they do not have enough capacity to do all that has been
defined in the national policy and therefore have to make choices within the
institutional arrangements defined in the health sector. The findings suggest that the
process for selecting priorities at the district level is embedded in the managerial
process at the district level and is essentially negotiated and dependent on the interests
of district directors of health services and their teams, with very little involvement of
other actors outside the GHS.
Furthermore, providers at the district level tend to focus on aspects of RH consistent
with their mission and comparative advantage. Both the public and private health
institutions tend to focus on safe motherhood; FP and STI/HIV AIDS while NGOs tend
to focus on the abandonment of harmful traditional practices and promotion of sexual
health. The management of infertility and RH cancers is absent in both districts.
The fact that national level priorities are district level priorities leads us to conclude that
the thrust of activities at the district level is about building capacity to implement
national priorities rather than selecting priorities. Secondly, the challenge facing RH is
not HSR per se but the broad range of RH services and the capacity required to ensure
that they are fully integrated into the health system. The contribution of health sector
reforms to reproductive health is in ensuring that health systems development under
HSR keeps pace with the capacity needed to deliver RH interventions. In the case of
Ghana, it appears HSR has so far been unable to do so.
Recommendations for bridging the policy implementation gap include:
Ensuring that RH advocates participate in national policy dialogue. This will ensure
that the policy dialogue gives balanced attention to issues of systems development
and reproductive health service delivery and indeed ensure that health sector
reforms deliver health interventions.
Investing in strengthening systems for procurement and distribution of drugs and
other supplies required for the integrated delivery of RH services. This is
28
particularly important because inadequate inputs, including equipment and
supplies,at the points of service delivery is one of the key constraints to the delivery
of health services and has emerged as the major gap between the rhetoric of health
sector reforms and the reality of service delivery.
Recognizing that the public sector alone cannot deliver the comprehensive RH
package defined in the national RH policy and that other implementers, in particular
NGOs, have a comparative advantage in the delivery of certain components. NGOs
should, therefore, be mobilized and funded to deliver these packages to ensure
availability of a comprehensive package of RH services at the district level.
Districts could mobilize more funds from District Assemblies to support
implementation of RH activities. This will, however, require increased participation
of other critical actors such as the District Assembly and District Health Committee
in the dialogue on health policies and programmes at the district level.
29
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31
Annex 1
Reproductive Health Capacity Measures
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Protocols for STI
a) Confidentiality protocol or policy for STI
b) Informed consent protocol for STI testing
c) National Reproductive Health Service Protocols
d) Clinical guidelines for diagnosing and treating STI
e) Guidelines for using syndromic approach for diagnosing and
treating STIs
f) Guidelines for diagnosing HIV/AIDS
g) Guidelines for PMCT
h) Clinical guidelines for treating HIV/AIDS (Anti-retroviral use
and opportunistic infections)
i) Self Directed Learning (SDL) models for STI/HIVAIDS
STI Job aid
a) Visual aids for teaching HIV/AIDS
b) Flip chart for STI/HIV
c) Audio-visual for teaching about STI and HIV/AIDS
d) Model for demonstrating use of condom
e) Stop AIDS Love life poster
Booklet/pamphlet for clients to take home
a) On STI
b) HIV questions & answers booklet
c) Other pamphlet on HIV/AIDS
HIV/AIDS Protocols and Guidelines
a) Guidelines for Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission
b) Guidelines for diagnosing HIV/AIDS
c) Guidelines for treating HIV/AIDS? (Anti-retroviral use
and/or opportunistic infections)
d) Confidentiality protocol for HIV/AIDS clients
e) Informed consent protocol for HIV/AIDS
Items required for laboratory examination
a) Microscope
b) Centrifuge
c) Slides and covers (malaria smears; gram stain)
Supplies for HIV/AIDS tests
a) Rapid test
b) ELISA + SCANNER
c) Western Blott
d) HIV SPOT test
e) CD 4
f) HIV viral load
Supplies for STIs tests
a) VDRL
b) Carbon antigen
c) Chocolate Agar (culture media)
d) Crystal violet
32
8
9
10
11
e) Lugals iodine
f) Acetone
g) Neutran red or safranan
Supplies for ANC tests
a) Clinistix or albistix for urine protein (with valid expiry date)
b) Other test for urine albumin
c) Test for anemia
d) Hemoglobinometer/calorimeter
e) Dapkins solution
f) Capillary tubes (for hematocrit)
g) Stericon strips or tallquist test (with/valid expiry dates)
Essential medications and supplies for providing maternal
health and STI treatment
a) Amoxicillin oral (2)
b) Ciprofloxin PO (3)
c) Doxyclinie PO (3)
d) Ergometrine oral (2)
e) Erythromycin oral (3)
f) Ethambutol PO (4)
g) Iron (2)
h) Iron with Folic Acid (2)
i) Isoniazid (4)
j) Metronidiazole (FLAGYL) (2,3)
k) Sulpadoxine/pyrimethamine (FANSIDAR) (2)
l) Pyrazinamide PO (4)
m) Rifampicin (4)
n) Vitamin A high dose (200, 000 iu) (2)
INJECTABLE MEDICATIONS
a) Ampicillin Inj (2)
b) Benzathine benzyl pen Inj. (IM) or (Procaine pen IM) (2,3)
c) Ceftriaxone Inj (3)
d) Ergometrine/oxytomin injection (2)
e) Gentamycin injection
f) Magnesium sulfate injection (2)
g) Streptomycin (4)
h) Syntocinon inj. (2)
i) Xylocain or lidocain 1% (5)
Recommended Anti-retroviral
a) AZT/Ziduvudine
b) Nevirapine
c) Other NNRTI
d) Protease Inhibitors
Vaccines
a) Tetanus Toxiod
b) BCG Dilutant
c) Oral Polio
d) DPT
e) Measles & Dilutant
33
12
13
14
15
16
17
Family planning contraceptive supplies
a) Oral pill with progesterone
b) Oral pill (combined)
c) Injectable (monthly)
d) Injectable (2/3 monthly)
e) Norplant
f) Condom (male)
g) Condom (female)
h) Intrauterine device (IUD)
i) Vaginal form tablets
j) Emergency contraceptive
Family Planning visual aid for teaching
a) Different family planning methods
b) Models for demonstrating use of condom
c) Posters on family planning
d) Essentials of Contraceptive Technology” poster
e) Information booklet/pamphlet on family planning for clients
to take home
f) The Essentials of Contraceptive Technology book
(HATCHER)
Items for family planning services
a) Blood pressure gauge
b) Stethoscope
c) Weighing scale
d) Syringes and needles
Essential equipment for antenatal care services
a) Blood pressure gauge
b) Stethoscope
c) Fetal stethoscope
d) Thermometer
e) Infant scale
f) Adult scale
g) Measuring tape
h) Vaginal speculum (L)
i) Vaginal speculum (M)
j) Vaginal speculum (S)
k) Examination couch/table/bed
Antenatal care protocols and teaching materials
a) National Reproductive Health Policy and Standards
b) Standard Guidelines/protocol for Focused Antenatal Care
c) Revised Maternal Cards
d) Guidelines for Prevention of Mother to Child HIV/AIDS
Transmission (PMCT)
e) Focused ANC Job aid
Items for delivery care
a) Soap
b) Scissor/blade
c) Clamp/umbilical tie
d) Ergometrine oral
34
18
19
e) Ergometrine Inj. With syringe and needle
f) Spotlight source (flashlight or examination light accepted)
Lantern NOT Acceptable
g) Table and stool for delivery
h) Hand-washing items (soap and towel)
i) Single use towel
j) Water for hand-washing
k) Clean gloves
l) Sharps container
m) Decontamination solution for clinical equipment
n) Skin antiseptic (e.g chlorhexidine, savlon, detol)
o) IV infusion set
p) Intravenous: ethier Ringers lactate, D5NS, or NS infusion
q) Injectable Ergometrine
r) Syringes and needles
s) Suture material with needle
t) Sterile scissors/blade
u) Needle holder
Supplies for baby
a) Bag and mask or tube and mask (baby) for resuscitation
b) Resuscitation table for baby
c) Heat source
d) Baby scale
e) Mucous extractor/suction machine
f) Cord ties/cordclamps
g) Delivery protocols
h) Reference guidelines for delivery and emergency care
i) Blank partographs
Items for assisted delivery
a) Forceps
b) Vacuum extractor
c) Does this facility have a Manual vacuum aspirator
35