Improving health-care quality in resource-poor settings

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Nambiar, Bejoy
Hargreaves, Dougal S.
Morroni, Chelsea
Heys, Michelle
Crowe, Sonya
Pagel, Christina
Fitzgerald, Felicity
Frazao Pinheiro, Susana
Devakumar, Delan
Mann, Sue
Lakhanpaul, Monica
Marshall, Martin
Colbourn, Tim
Publisher
World Health Organization
Date
November 2016
Publication
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Abstract / Description

Improvements in health-care quality can contribute to healthier populations. However, many global and national health strategies are not sufficiently considering the issues of measuring and improving health-care quality in low-resource settings. The barriers to delivering high-quality care are often similar across different health systems. However, the extent and mechanisms through which these barriers affect quality improvement interventions may be different in resource-poor settings. Investments in health systems strengthening without continuous quality improvement is thought to be a useless effort. Conversely, only focusing on quality improvement in a resource-poor context without engaging the broader health system for support is of limited value. Hence, both areas must be improved simultaneously. 

Here, we call for renewed focus on quality improvement of health-system delivery by policy-makers, managers and health-care providers, working at all levels of health-care systems in resource-poor settings. To maximize the potential of quality improvements, we propose an approach focusing on five elements: (i) systems thinking; (ii) stakeholders’ participation; (iii) accountability; (iv) evidence-based interventions; and (v) innovative evaluation. (abbreviated author introduction)

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