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Comprehensive and integrated district health systems strengthening: the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership

Comprehensive and integrated district health systems strengthening: the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership
Comprehensive and integrated district health systems strengthening: the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership
Background: Nationally, health in Rwanda has been improving since 2000, with considerable improvement since 2005. Despite improvements, rural areas continue to lag behind urban sectors with regard to key health outcomes. Partners In Health (PIH) has been supporting the Rwanda Ministry of Health (MOH) in two rural districts in Rwanda since 2005. Since 2009, the MOH and PIH have spearheaded a health systems strengthening (HSS) intervention in these districts as part of the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership. The partnership is guided by the belief that HSS interventions should be comprehensive, integrated, responsive to local conditions, and address health care access, cost, and quality. The PHIT Partnership represents a collaboration between the MOH and PIH, with support from the National University of Rwanda School of Public Health, the National Institute of Statistics, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

Description of intervention: The PHIT Partnership’s health systems support aligns with the World Health Organization’s six health systems building blocks. HSS activities focus across all levels of the health system — community, health center, hospital, and district leadership — to improve health care access, quality, delivery, and health outcomes. Interventions are concentrated on three main areas: targeted support for health facilities, quality improvement initiatives, and a strengthened network of community health workers.

Evaluation design: The impact of activities will be assessed using population-level outcomes data collected through oversampling of the demographic and health survey (DHS) in the intervention districts. The overall impact evaluation is complemented by an analysis of trends in facility health care utilization. A comprehensive costing project captures the total expenditures and financial inputs of the health care system to determine the cost of systems improvement. Targeted evaluations and operational research pieces focus on specific programmatic components, supported by partnership-supported work to build in-country research capacity.

Discussion: Building on early successes, the work of the Rwanda PHIT Partnership approach to HSS has already seen noticeable increases in facility capacity and quality of care. The rigorous planned evaluation of the Partnership’s HSS activities will contribute to global knowledge about intervention methodology, cost, and population health impact.
1472-6963
1-13
Drobac, Peter C.
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Basinga, Paulin
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Condo, Jeanine
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Farmer, Paul E.
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Finnegan, Karen E.
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Hamon, Jessie K.
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Amoroso, Cheryl
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Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
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Kakoma, Jean Baptise
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Lu, Chunling
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Murangwa, Yusuf
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Murray, Megan
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Ngabo, Fidele
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Rich, Michael
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Thomson, Dana
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Binagwaho, Agnes
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Drobac, Peter C.
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Basinga, Paulin
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Condo, Jeanine
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Farmer, Paul E.
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Finnegan, Karen E.
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Hamon, Jessie K.
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Amoroso, Cheryl
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Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
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Kakoma, Jean Baptise
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Lu, Chunling
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Murangwa, Yusuf
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Murray, Megan
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Ngabo, Fidele
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Rich, Michael
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Thomson, Dana
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Binagwaho, Agnes
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Drobac, Peter C., Basinga, Paulin and Condo, Jeanine et al. (2013) Comprehensive and integrated district health systems strengthening: the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership. BMC Health Services Research, 13 (Suppl 2), 1-13. (doi:10.1186/1472-6963-13-S2-S5). (PMID:23819573)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Nationally, health in Rwanda has been improving since 2000, with considerable improvement since 2005. Despite improvements, rural areas continue to lag behind urban sectors with regard to key health outcomes. Partners In Health (PIH) has been supporting the Rwanda Ministry of Health (MOH) in two rural districts in Rwanda since 2005. Since 2009, the MOH and PIH have spearheaded a health systems strengthening (HSS) intervention in these districts as part of the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership. The partnership is guided by the belief that HSS interventions should be comprehensive, integrated, responsive to local conditions, and address health care access, cost, and quality. The PHIT Partnership represents a collaboration between the MOH and PIH, with support from the National University of Rwanda School of Public Health, the National Institute of Statistics, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

Description of intervention: The PHIT Partnership’s health systems support aligns with the World Health Organization’s six health systems building blocks. HSS activities focus across all levels of the health system — community, health center, hospital, and district leadership — to improve health care access, quality, delivery, and health outcomes. Interventions are concentrated on three main areas: targeted support for health facilities, quality improvement initiatives, and a strengthened network of community health workers.

Evaluation design: The impact of activities will be assessed using population-level outcomes data collected through oversampling of the demographic and health survey (DHS) in the intervention districts. The overall impact evaluation is complemented by an analysis of trends in facility health care utilization. A comprehensive costing project captures the total expenditures and financial inputs of the health care system to determine the cost of systems improvement. Targeted evaluations and operational research pieces focus on specific programmatic components, supported by partnership-supported work to build in-country research capacity.

Discussion: Building on early successes, the work of the Rwanda PHIT Partnership approach to HSS has already seen noticeable increases in facility capacity and quality of care. The rigorous planned evaluation of the Partnership’s HSS activities will contribute to global knowledge about intervention methodology, cost, and population health impact.

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Published date: 31 May 2013
Organisations: Social Statistics & Demography

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Local EPrints ID: 404152
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404152
ISSN: 1472-6963
PURE UUID: a7b4c4ee-603b-43ae-a3a2-d5593ee066cf
ORCID for Dana Thomson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9507-9123

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Date deposited: 05 Jan 2017 15:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Peter C. Drobac
Author: Paulin Basinga
Author: Jeanine Condo
Author: Paul E. Farmer
Author: Karen E. Finnegan
Author: Jessie K. Hamon
Author: Cheryl Amoroso
Author: Lisa R. Hirschhorn
Author: Jean Baptise Kakoma
Author: Chunling Lu
Author: Yusuf Murangwa
Author: Megan Murray
Author: Fidele Ngabo
Author: Michael Rich
Author: Dana Thomson ORCID iD
Author: Agnes Binagwaho

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