National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities

Background: The 2008 Maputo Declaration calls for the development of dedicated national laboratory policies and strategic plans supporting the enhancement of laboratory services in response to the long-lasting relegation of medical laboratory systems in sub-Saharan Africa. Objectives: This study de...

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Main Authors: Pascale Ondoa, Ankie van der Broek, Christel Jansen, Hilde de Bruijn, Constance Schultsz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-07-01
Series:African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajlmonline.org/index.php/ajlm/article/view/578
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spelling doaj-a96ae51d07d24a598c67a0983df54c842020-11-24T21:30:43ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Laboratory Medicine2225-20022225-20102017-07-0161e1e2010.4102/ajlm.v6i1.578174National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunitiesPascale Ondoa0Ankie van der Broek1Christel Jansen2Hilde de Bruijn3Constance Schultsz4Department of Global Health, Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, AmsterdamRoyal Tropical Institute, AmsterdamRoyal Tropical Institute, AmsterdamMinistry of Education, Culture and Science, International Policy Unit, The HagueDepartment of Global Health, Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, AmsterdamBackground: The 2008 Maputo Declaration calls for the development of dedicated national laboratory policies and strategic plans supporting the enhancement of laboratory services in response to the long-lasting relegation of medical laboratory systems in sub-Saharan Africa. Objectives: This study describes the extent to which laboratories are addressed in the national health policies and plans created directly following the 2008 momentum for laboratory strengthening. Method: National health policies and plans from 39 sub-Saharan African countries, valid throughout and beyond 31 December 2010 were collected in March 2012 and analysed during 2013. Results: Laboratories were addressed by all countries. Human resources were the most addressed topic (38/39) and finances and budget were the least addressed (< 5/39). Countries lagging behind in national laboratory strategic planning at the end of 2013 (17/39) were more likely to be francophone countries located in West-Central Africa (13/17) and have historically low HIV prevalence. The most common gaps anticipated to compromise the implementation of the policies and plans were the disconnect between policies and plans, under-developed finance sections and monitoring and evaluating frameworks, absence of points of reference to define gaps and shortages, and inappropriate governance structure. Conclusion: The availability of laboratory policy and plan implementation can be improved by strictly applying a more standardised methodology for policy development, using harmonised norms to set targets for improvement and intensifying the establishment of directorates of laboratory services directly under the authority of Ministries of Health. Horizontal programmes such as the Global Health Security Agenda could provide the necessary impulse to take the least advanced countries on board.https://ajlmonline.org/index.php/ajlm/article/view/578Policy analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pascale Ondoa
Ankie van der Broek
Christel Jansen
Hilde de Bruijn
Constance Schultsz
spellingShingle Pascale Ondoa
Ankie van der Broek
Christel Jansen
Hilde de Bruijn
Constance Schultsz
National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities
African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
Policy analysis
author_facet Pascale Ondoa
Ankie van der Broek
Christel Jansen
Hilde de Bruijn
Constance Schultsz
author_sort Pascale Ondoa
title National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities
title_short National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities
title_full National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities
title_fullStr National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities
title_full_unstemmed National laboratory policies and plans in sub-Saharan African countries: gaps and opportunities
title_sort national laboratory policies and plans in sub-saharan african countries: gaps and opportunities
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
issn 2225-2002
2225-2010
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Background: The 2008 Maputo Declaration calls for the development of dedicated national laboratory policies and strategic plans supporting the enhancement of laboratory services in response to the long-lasting relegation of medical laboratory systems in sub-Saharan Africa. Objectives: This study describes the extent to which laboratories are addressed in the national health policies and plans created directly following the 2008 momentum for laboratory strengthening. Method: National health policies and plans from 39 sub-Saharan African countries, valid throughout and beyond 31 December 2010 were collected in March 2012 and analysed during 2013. Results: Laboratories were addressed by all countries. Human resources were the most addressed topic (38/39) and finances and budget were the least addressed (< 5/39). Countries lagging behind in national laboratory strategic planning at the end of 2013 (17/39) were more likely to be francophone countries located in West-Central Africa (13/17) and have historically low HIV prevalence. The most common gaps anticipated to compromise the implementation of the policies and plans were the disconnect between policies and plans, under-developed finance sections and monitoring and evaluating frameworks, absence of points of reference to define gaps and shortages, and inappropriate governance structure. Conclusion: The availability of laboratory policy and plan implementation can be improved by strictly applying a more standardised methodology for policy development, using harmonised norms to set targets for improvement and intensifying the establishment of directorates of laboratory services directly under the authority of Ministries of Health. Horizontal programmes such as the Global Health Security Agenda could provide the necessary impulse to take the least advanced countries on board.
topic Policy analysis
url https://ajlmonline.org/index.php/ajlm/article/view/578
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