energy

State of the World’s Mothers 2012: Nutrition in the First 1,000 Days

Published by: 
Save the Children

Every year, our State of the World’s Mothers report reminds us of the inextricable link between the well-being of mothers and their children. More than 90 years of experience on the ground have shown us that when mothers have health care, education and economic opportunity, both they and their children have the best chance to survive and thrive.

Independent Monitoring Board of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative

Published by: 
Other/ unknown/ unpublished

The Independent Monitoring Board was convened at the request of the World Health Assembly to monitor and guide the progress of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative’s 2010-12 Strategic Plan. This plan aims to interrupt polio transmission globally by the end of next year.

Rapid appraisal of primary level health care services for HIV-positive children at public sector clinics in South Africa

Published by: 
Health Systems Trust
Several effective health and social interventions are available which have been shown to improve life expectancy and quality of life in HIV-infected children. The Children's Institute (UCT) recently completed a rapid appraisal of primary level health care services to determine the extent to which some of these interventions are available to children. The study highlights the need for improved monitoring and evaluation of the implementation of existing policies and guidelines and for training of primary level health care staff on the appropriate management of HIV in children.

Introducing the Initiative for Sub-District Support

Published by: 
Health Systems Trust
The Initiative for Sub-District Support (ISDS) aims to demonstrate improved standards of primary health care by providing sustained, systematic and comprehensive support to selected sub-districts. In other words, ISDS hopes to improve service delivery by identifying those factors which affect health care at local level, and developing practical ways of changing these factors for the better.

South African Health Review 1996

Series Name: 
South African Health Review
Published by: 
Health Systems Trust

The South African Health Review 1996 documents the degree to which structural reform and policy formulation within the health sector has translated into real improvements in service delivery and the quality of peoples lives. In sum, the Review reveals a mixed scorecard. Progress has been excellent in some areas, whereas others show little movement. This, the Review argues, is the nature of health reform.

Perhaps the overriding success of the Ministry of Health has been the process of restructuring towards primary health care, reflected both in the organisation of health care and expenditure patterns. Equally impressive has been the introduction of an essential drugs list within the public sector, which is likely to improve the availability of medicines over a relatively short period of time. At local level, the Department of Health can take credit for generating tremendous enthusiasm for change amongst service managers and health workers.

But in the critical areas of financing and health legislation, progress has been slow. Discussions about some form of social health insurance have borne little fruit. A new Health Act is in its seventh draft, but has not been available for public comment. In addition, controversy over Cuban doctors and vocational training for new graduates has often obscured the need for a comprehensive plan for addressing the maldistribution of health personnel in South African - from province to province, between public and private sector, and between hospital and primary care facilities. All of the above need to be addressed as a matter of urgency in the next year.

The South African Health Review 1996 tackles Sarafina 2 head-on, and considers its effect on HIV/AIDS prevention, the ability of the Department to make progress over the past year, and the relationship between the executive and legislative arms of health governance. But it places the biggest controversy faced by the Health Department during 1996 in the context of the full programme of health care reform initiated by the Ministry. Areas of energy and activity which serve as the vanguard of health reform have been identified, as have bottlenecks which impede progress.

Progress Towards District Based Care

Series Name: 
HST Update
Published by: 
Health Systems Trust
This issue of HST Update documents progress towards district systems development from all three angles. First, we examine the policy environment in which district development is occurring, and assess the degree to which outstanding policy issues are being resolved. Second, we guage provincial efforts to restructure health services toward district-based care. Finally, we examine several initiatives which home in on service delivery, and describe how these initiatives help give practical meaning to district-based health care.

Action for Health in Bothaville - A Situational Analysis

Published by: 
Health Systems Trust
Several workshops and interventions have since been put in place and there has been some visible progress in the development of the DHS in the Tshepo District. This document will include information from the reports of workshops and documents produced since the ISDS started in April 1997, supplemented by information from the Free States Department of Health, the Centre for Health Systems Research and Development (University of the Free State) and the Bothaville/Kgotsong Local Council with a plan of action.