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Primary Health Care From Alma-Ata Declaration to 21st Century

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Title: Primary Health Care From Alma-Ata Declaration to 21st Century


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Primary Health Care-2
  • By
  • Col Naseer Alam Tariq (Retd)

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Primary Health CareFrom Alma-Ata
Declaration to 21st Century

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Primary Health Care
  • The main goal of the governments and the World
    Health Organization in the coming years should be
  • The attainment by all people of the world by
    the year 2000, a level of health that would
    permit them to lead a socially and economically
    productive life.

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Primary Health Care
  • Essential Health care based on practical,
    scientifically sound, and socially acceptable
    methods and technology made universally
    accessible to individuals and families in the
    community through their full participation and at
    a cost that the country and community can afford

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Principles of PHC
  • Equity
  • Appropriate technology
  • Community Participation
  • Intersectoral Coordination

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Components of PHC
  • Health Education
  • Promotion of proper food and nutrition,
  • Adequate supply of safe water and sanitation
  • MCH including Family Planning
  • Immunization against major diseases
  • Prevention and control of locally endemic
    diseases
  • Appropriate treatment of common diseases and
    injuries
  • Promotion of mental health
  • Provision of essential drugs

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PHC- Global Targets
  • All people in every country will have ready
    access at least to essential health care and to
    first level referral facilities
  • All people will be actively involved in caring
    for themselves and their families, as far as they
    can, in community action for health
  • Communities will share responsibility for their
    health
  • Safe drinking water and sanitation will be
    available to all people.

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PHC- Global Targets
  • All people will be adequately nourished
  • All children will be immunized against major
    diseases
  • All possible ways will be applied to prevent and
    control non-communicable diseases and promote
    mental health through influencing life styles,
    and controlling the physical and psychological
    environment

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PHC-Extended Elements in 21st Century
  • Expanded options of immunizations
  • Reproductive Health Needs
  • Provision of essential technologies for health
  • Health Promotion
  • Prevention and control of non-communicable
    diseases
  • Food safety and provision of selected food
    supplements

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Millennium Development Goals
  • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
  • Achieve universal primary education
  • Improve maternal health
  • Reduce child mortality
  • Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other communicable
    diseases
  • Promote gender equity
  • Ensure environmental sustainability
  • Develop global partnership for development

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Obstacles to implement PHC Strategy
  • Misinterpretation of the PHC Concept
  • Misconception that PHC is 2nd rate health care
    for the poor
  • Resistance to Change
  • Lack of political will
  • Centralized planning and Management
    infrastructure

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Primary Health Care
  • CAUSES OF FAILURE

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CAUSES OF FAILURE
  • Managerial Deficiencies
  • Service Delivery Failure
  • Community Causes

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MANAGERIAL DEFICIENCIES
  • Lack of trained managers
  • Lack of selection and training criteria for
    managers
  • Lack of proper performance evaluation of health
    managers
  • Lack of motivation leading to professional and
    financial corruption

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SERVICE DELIVERY FAILURE
  • Accessibility problems
  • Utilization Failure
  • Efficiency problems

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ACCESSIBILITY ISSUES
  • 25 30 of PHC facilities have been ill-planned
    and care usually out of reach of the rural
    community where logistics problems is as big
    issue as is poverty.
  • Such facilities are a big problem for
    non-resident PHC staff, which further augments
    the problem, and promotes quackery in such areas.

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UTILIZATION FAILURE
  • Since its inception, PHC has been promoted as an
    alternative for curative care. This image has
    been promoted by professional as well as
    political forces.
  • The result is that the concept of PHC has been
    buried and PHC has been synonymously taken as 2nd
    degree medical care for the poor.

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UTILIZATION FAILURE (CONTD)
  • PHC has been down looked upon resulting in the
    vacuum being filled by virtually non-committed
    untrained staff, which has offered a parallel
    system of tertiary care in PHC facilities at
    minimal or no cost.
  • Lack of training and proper monitoring / check
    and balance on the PHC staff.

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UTILIZATION FAILURE (CONTD)
  • Not being a government priority
  • Lack of quality of care yardsticks for Primary
    Health Care
  • No active research in this field
  • Government one step forward, two steps backward
    approach to PHC, resulting in lack of consistency
    in various PHC program.

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EFFICIENCY PROBLEMS
  • Lack of standardized management protocols for
    common PHC problems
  • Off and on and un-rational drug policy of the
    Health Department
  • Lack of clear cut policy, regulatory and
    organizational mechanisms resulting in haphazard
    experimentation.

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COMMUNITY CAUSES
  • Community participation has been virtually
    non-existent in PHC
  • Gap in Community and Public sector has widened
    the bridge.
  • Health education has been given a backseat in
    PHC.
  • Low literacy levels and economic deprivation has
    forced people to shift entire responsibility of
    their health on state shoulders.

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COMMUNITY CAUSES (CONTD)
  • Cultural peculiarities have hindered the way of
    whatsoever little implementation of PHC in NWFP.
    Worst hit areas have been the western cultural
    zone, and the mid and mid-north cultural zones.
  • Alternatively quackery has filled in the vacuum
    due to cultural considerations.

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FIVE COMMON SHORTCOMINGS OF HEALTH CARE DELIVERY
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INVERSE CARE
  • People with most means whose needs for health
    care are often less consume the most care,
    whereas those with the least means and greatest
    health problems consume the least.
  • Public spending on health services most often
    benefits the rich more than the poor in high and
    low income countries alike.

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IMPOVERISHING CARE
  • Wherever people lack social protection and
    payment for care is largely out of pocket at the
    point of service, they can be confronted with
    catastrophic expenses.
  • Over 100 million people annually fall into
    poverty because they have to pay for health care.

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FRAGMENTED CARE
  • The excessive specialization of health care
    providers and the narrow focus of many disease
    control program discourage a holistic approach to
    the individuals and the families they deal with
    and do not appreciate the need for continuity in
    care.
  • Health services for poor and marginalized groups
    are often highly fragmented and severely
    under-resourced, while development aid often
    adds to the fragmentation.

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UNSAFE CARE
  • Poor system design that is unable to ensure
    safety and hygiene standards leads to high rates
    of hospital acquired infections, along with
    medication errors and other avoidable adverse
    effects that are an underestimated cause of death
    and ill health.

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MISDIRECTED CARE
  • Resource allocation clusters around curative
    services at great cost, neglecting the potential
    of primary prevention and health promotion to
    prevent up to 70 of the disease burden.
  • At the same time, the health sector lacks the
    expertise to mitigate the adverse effects on
    health from other sectors and make the most of
    what these other sectors can contribute to
    health.

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WAYS TO MOVE AHEAD
  • Health has to be linked with education and
    poverty alleviation
  • PHC has to be redefined in Government books
  • Managerial competencies needs to be developed
    through intensive training and very strict
    monitoring.

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WAYS TO MOVE AHEAD(CONTD)
  • Ongoing PHC training for all PHC staff with
    proper monitoring and evaluation and made must
    for all promotions in PHC.
  • Financial investment in PHC needs to be increased
    with help of donors.
  • Health should further be de-centralized with
    involvement of community and mechanism be made
    for partly community funding of PHC.

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WAYS TO MOVE AHEAD (CONTD)
  • Precise, clear cut and unambiguous, policy,
    regulatory and organizational paradigms should be
    constructed for PHC.
  • Health department should be prepared for change
    management with clear and unconditional backing
    of NGOs, political forces, and Government.

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THANKS
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