Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study

Poor governance contributes to poor health outcomes and may constrain a country’s progress in attaining its health goals. Yet, governance is not commonly used as a lever to improve the health sector or health system performance. Lack of a clear body of evidence linking governance interventions to be...

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Main Author: Mahesh Shukla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-07-01
Series:Health Systems & Reform
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2018.1477536
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spelling doaj-9d9cb610abfe440ca6e0b087bfbd910e2020-11-25T03:01:50ZengTaylor & Francis GroupHealth Systems & Reform2328-86042328-86202018-07-014324926610.1080/23288604.2018.14775361477536Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental StudyMahesh Shukla0Health Programs Group, Management Sciences for HealthPoor governance contributes to poor health outcomes and may constrain a country’s progress in attaining its health goals. Yet, governance is not commonly used as a lever to improve the health sector or health system performance. Lack of a clear body of evidence linking governance interventions to better health system performance is one likely reason. This quasi-experimental study conducted in Afghanistan examines the causal impact of a provincial health governance intervention on the provincial health system’s performance. It compares health system performance indicators between 16 intervention provinces and 18 nonintervention provinces using a difference-in-differences analysis to draw inference. The intervention consisted of governance action planning, implementation of the governance action plan, and self-assessment of governance performance before and after the intervention. The intervention had a statistically and practically significant impact on six indicators. Specifically, the intervention increased a province’s rate of outpatient department visits per person by an average of 18 percentage points and achievements in Penta 3 immunization, antenatal visits, postnatal visits, tuberculosis case detection, and facility delivery by 17, 14, 12, 11, and five percentage points, respectively (P < 0.01). No impact was detected on tetanus toxoid administration to pregnant mothers and tuberculosis cure; a marginally negative impact was seen in community health worker home visits and new family planning users. Governing bodies provide an opportunity for governance reform. Improving health system governance is relevant to the current situation in low-income countries, where weak health systems are a significant barrier to addressing epidemics and providing high-quality health services.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2018.1477536governance and healthhealth governancehealth governance impacthealth system governancehealth system performance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mahesh Shukla
spellingShingle Mahesh Shukla
Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study
Health Systems & Reform
governance and health
health governance
health governance impact
health system governance
health system performance
author_facet Mahesh Shukla
author_sort Mahesh Shukla
title Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study
title_short Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study
title_full Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study
title_fullStr Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study
title_full_unstemmed Impact of a Health Governance Intervention on Provincial Health System Performance in Afghanistan: A Quasi-Experimental Study
title_sort impact of a health governance intervention on provincial health system performance in afghanistan: a quasi-experimental study
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Health Systems & Reform
issn 2328-8604
2328-8620
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Poor governance contributes to poor health outcomes and may constrain a country’s progress in attaining its health goals. Yet, governance is not commonly used as a lever to improve the health sector or health system performance. Lack of a clear body of evidence linking governance interventions to better health system performance is one likely reason. This quasi-experimental study conducted in Afghanistan examines the causal impact of a provincial health governance intervention on the provincial health system’s performance. It compares health system performance indicators between 16 intervention provinces and 18 nonintervention provinces using a difference-in-differences analysis to draw inference. The intervention consisted of governance action planning, implementation of the governance action plan, and self-assessment of governance performance before and after the intervention. The intervention had a statistically and practically significant impact on six indicators. Specifically, the intervention increased a province’s rate of outpatient department visits per person by an average of 18 percentage points and achievements in Penta 3 immunization, antenatal visits, postnatal visits, tuberculosis case detection, and facility delivery by 17, 14, 12, 11, and five percentage points, respectively (P < 0.01). No impact was detected on tetanus toxoid administration to pregnant mothers and tuberculosis cure; a marginally negative impact was seen in community health worker home visits and new family planning users. Governing bodies provide an opportunity for governance reform. Improving health system governance is relevant to the current situation in low-income countries, where weak health systems are a significant barrier to addressing epidemics and providing high-quality health services.
topic governance and health
health governance
health governance impact
health system governance
health system performance
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2018.1477536
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