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UGANDA HEALTHSYSTEM
ASSESSMENT 2011
Health Systems 20/20 is USAID‟s flagship project for strengthening health systems worldwide. By supporting
countries to improve their health financing, governance, operations, and institutional capacities, Health Systems
20/20 helps eliminate barriers to the delivery and use of priority health care, such as HIV/AIDS services,
tuberculosis treatment, reproductive health services, and maternal and child health care.
April 2012
For additional copies of this report, please email info@healthsystems2020.org or visit our website at
www.healthsystems2020.org
Cooperative Agreement No.: GHS-A-00-06-00010-00
Submitted to: Scott Stewart, AOTR
Health Systems Division
Office of Health, Infectious Disease and Nutrition
Bureau for Global Health
United States Agency for International Development
Recommended Citation: Ministry of Health, Health Systems 20/20, and Makerere University School of Public
Health. April 2012. UgandaHealthSystemAssessment2011. Kampala, Uganda and Bethesda, MD: Health Systems
20/20 project, Abt Associates Inc.
Abt Associates Inc. I 4550 Montgomery Avenue I Suite 800 North
I Bethesda, Maryland 20814 I P: 301.347.5000 I F: 301.913.9061
I www.healthsystems2020.org I www.abtassociates.com
In collaboration with:
I Aga Khan Foundation I Bitrán y Asociados I BRAC University I Broad Branch Associates
I Deloitte Consulting, LLP I Forum One Communications I RTI International
I Training Resources Group I Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
UGANDA
HEALTH SYSTEMASSESSMENT2011
better systems, better health
Ministry of Health
Kampala, Uganda
Makerere University
School of Public Health
Kampala, Uganda
April 2012
This publication was produced for review by the Ministry of Health, Uganda and the United States Agency for
International Development. It was prepared by the Ministry of Health, Health Systems 20/20, and Makerere
University School of Public Health.
DISCLAIMER
The author’s views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) or the United States Government.
FOREWORD
There is global consensus, among both developing and developed nations, that strong health systems are
essential to the effective delivery of health services and improved health outcomes. Understanding the
current status of the healthsystem of Uganda is therefore critical, in order for the Ministry of Health,
other government agencies, development partners, the private sector, NGOs, and others to be able to
develop, implement, and monitor healthsystem strengthening programs and deliver health services to
the people of Uganda, as well as to achieve the government‟s priority objectives as specified in the
Uganda Health Sector Strategic and Investment Plan (HSSIP) 2010/11–2014/15.
This HealthSystemAssessment is a snapshot of the healthsystem of Uganda in 2011. It is based on a
methodology that has been applied in more than 25 countries, and was adapted to the Ugandan
situation. The approach focuses on the six building blocks of the health system, as defined by the World
Health Organization: Governance; Health Financing; Human Resources for Health; Service Delivery;
Medical Products, Vaccines, and Technologies; and Health Information Systems. There are
interrelationships among these six building blocks of the health system, which the assessment addresses.
The assessment identifies the strengths in the healthsystem of Uganda and also the challenges that the
Ministry of Health, with development partners, the private sector, and civil society, will need to address.
System strengths include the participatory nature of health sector governance, the use of evidence
generated locally and internationally to inform policy-making, improved collaboration between
government and development partners, and the increase in the number of potential service delivery
points across the country. Some of the challenges are: relatively high vacancy levels, particularly at
lower-level health facilities; coordinating all actors in the health sector; tapping the large private health
sector; and limited capacity in many districts for informed planning and implementation of health
programs.
This healthsystemassessment for Uganda was carried out during the first year of implementation of the
HSSIP. Its findings, therefore, serve as a benchmark of the health system. By doing a similar assessment
towards the end of HSSIP implementation, we will be able to gauge the progress made in the health
system over the period covered by the plan.
It is my hope that health workers, development and implementing partners, the private sector, civil
society, and policymakers in Uganda and beyond will use this HealthSystemAssessment report to
identify ways in which they can further strengthen Uganda‟s healthsystem so that it can deliver quality
services to people in Uganda.
I would like to thank all the numerous stakeholders who gave their time and other resources to support
this assessment. I would particularly like to thank: USAID, through the Health Systems 20/20 project,
implemented by Abt Associates, for the funding and technical assistance provided; Makerere University
School of Public Health, for being on the ground for the assessment at the country level and for
developing the capacity to do these kinds of healthsystem assessments; and development partners,
including the World Bank, the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and the UK‟s Department for International Development, for reviewing different assessment
concepts and draft reports.
Within the Ugandan government, I would like to thank the staff of the Ministry of Finance, Planning and
Economic Development and the Ministry of Public Service for providing relevant information for this
assessment. Finally, and most dear to us in the Ministry of Health, I would like to thank the staff of the
Ministry of Health, and particularly those in the Supervision, Monitoring, Evaluation, and Research
Technical Working Group, chaired by Dr. Henry Mwebesa, for steering the process on behalf of the
Ministry. The people of Uganda are grateful to all of you, for all your contributions.
Dr. Asuman Lukwago
Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Health
UGANDA HEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 V
CONTENTS
Acronyms xi
Acknowledgments xv
Executive Summary xvii
Introduction and Methodology xxiii
1. Background and Country Overview 1
1.1 Demographic Information and Population Growth 1
1.2 Mortality 3
1.3 Top Causes of Morbidity and Mortality 3
1.4 Reproductive Health Indicators 4
1.5 HIV, Tuberculosis, and Malaria 5
1.6 Nutrition, Sanitation, and Hygiene 5
1.7 Immunization 5
1.8 Business and Macroeconomic Environment 6
1.9 Service Delivery Organization 6
1.10 Governance of the Health Sector 7
1.10.1 National Planning, Policy, and Regulatory Frameworks . 9
1.10.2 Decentralization 9
1.11 Uganda National Minimum Health Care Package 9
1.12 Health Development Partner Coordination 9
2. Health Governance 11
2.1 Key Governance Indicators 12
2.2 Governance Structures 15
2.3 Health Sector Policies, Planning, and Implementation 17
2.3.1 State-District Relationships: Resources and Oversight . 18
2.3.2 Expanded Decentralization and its Implications 19
2.3.3 Decentralization and Decision Space 19
2.4 State-Provider Regulation 20
2.4.1 Private Sector Regulation 21
2.4.2 Supervision 22
2.4.3 Accountability and Transparency 22
2.5 Government and Health Development Partner Relationships 24
2.6 Service Provision, Information, and Lobbying 25
2.6.1 Service Provision 25
2.6.2 Information 25
2.6.3 Lobbying 26
2.7 Client Power and Voice 26
2.7.1 Media Participation in Governance 27
2.8 Summary of Findings: Health Governance 27
VI UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011
3. Health Financing 29
3.1 Overview 29
3.2 Resource Mobilization 30
3.3 Resource Flows and Management 33
3.4 Resource Allocation 34
3.4.1 Health Budget Formulation and Alignment to Medium-
Term Expenditure Framework 34
3.5 Resource Pooling 36
3.5.1 Social Health Insurance 37
3.5.2 Community-Based Health Insurance 37
3.5.3 Private Commercial Health Insurance 37
3.6 Financial Management 37
3.6.1 Financial Reporting 37
3.6.2 Auditing 38
3.6.3 Effectiveness and Efficiency in Resource Allocation and
Utilization 38
3.6.4 Equity in Financing of Health 39
3.7 Purchasing and Provider Payment 39
3.7.1 Contracting 39
3.8 Institutional Capacity Building for Financial Functions 40
3.9 Summary of Findings: Health Financing 40
4. Human Resources for Health 43
4.1 Overview 43
4.1.1 Overall Number of Health Care Workers in Uganda 44
4.1.2 Geographic and Facility Distribution of Health Care
Workers 45
4.1.3 HRH Availability by Facility Type 46
4.1.4 Availability of Data on HRH in the Public, Private, and
Private Not-for-Profit Sectors 47
4.1.5 Labor Market Dynamics 47
4.1.6 Productivity of the Existing Workforce 48
4.2 Human Resource Policy 49
4.2.1 Existing HRH Strategy and Policy 49
4.2.2 HRH Coordination Mechanisms 49
4.2.3 HRH Policy Implementation 50
4.2.4 Human Resource Management Within the MoH 50
4.3 Financing Workforce Costs 50
4.4 Performance Management 52
4.5 Training, Education, and Licensing 52
4.5.1 Workforce Licensing and Regulation 53
4.5.2 Cost of Training Programs 54
4.5.3 Quality of Training 54
4.6 Summary of Findings: Human Resources for Health 55
UGANDA HEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011
VII
5. Service Delivery 57
5.1 Overview and Health Indicators 57
5.2 Organization of Service Delivery 60
5.2.1 Integration 63
5.2.2 The Referral System 64
5.3 Availability and Coverage of Services 64
5.4 Service Utilization 66
5.5 Quality Assurance 67
5.6 Community Participation 69
5.7 Summary of Findings: Service Delivery 69
6. Medical Products, Vaccines, and Technologies 71
6.1 Overview of the MMP Sector 71
6.2 Policies, Laws, and Regulation 73
6.2.1 Policies 73
6.2.2 Legislation 74
6.2.3 Regulation 75
6.3 Financing 76
6.4 MMP Human Resources 78
6.5 Local Production of MMP 78
6.6 Management of MMP 80
6.6.1 Selection of MMP 80
6.6.2 Inventory Management 81
6.6.3 Public Procurement of Medicines at the National Level 83
6.6.4 Storage and Distribution 83
6.6.5 Distribution of Medicines to Health Facilities 85
6.7 Appropriate Use of Medicines 86
6.8 Summary of Findings: Medical Products, Vaccines, and
Technologies 86
7. Health Information Systems 89
7.1 Overview, Structure, and Relationships 89
7.2 Policies and Regulations 92
7.3 Data Sources 92
7.3.1 Routine Health Service Statistics 93
7.3.2 Data Collection by Village Health Teams 93
7.3.3 Population and Survey Data Sources 94
7.4 Data Management Systems 96
7.4.1 Electronic Medical Records and the District Health
Information System 97
7.4.2 Data Storage 98
7.5 Data Quality and Availability 98
7.5.1 Data Quality Assessment 100
7.5.2 Data Burden at the Health Facility Level 101
7.6 Human Resources for Health Information Systems 101
VIII UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011
7.7 Dissemination and Use of Data 102
7.8 Summary of Findings: Health Information Systems 103
8. Cross-Cutting Findings and Recommendations 105
8.1 Cross-cutting Findings and Recommendations 105
8.1.1 Improve Efficiency throughout the System to
Reduce Costs 107
8.1.2 Invest in Needed Policies, Tools and Systems To
Improve Quality Across All Sectors 108
8.1.3 Tap into Uganda‟s Private Health Sector to Increase
Access to Health Care 109
8.1.4 Strengthen Coordination of All Health Stakeholders to
Integrate the HealthSystem 109
8.1.5 Harnessing Consumer Power to Advocate for Better
Health Care 110
8.2 Recommendations by Technical Building Block Modules 111
8.2.1 Health Governance 111
8.2.2 Health Financing 113
8.2.3 Human Resources for Health 115
8.2.4 Service Delivery 117
8.2.5 Medical Pproducts, Vaccines, and Technologies 119
8.2.6 Health Information Systems 120
8.3 Priority Recommendations Identified by Stakeholders 122
Annex A. Stakeholder Resource Persons and Interviewees . 125
Annex B. District League Table 2010/11 129
Annex C. Funding on Health by Development Partners 135
Annex D. Proposed Indicators for Monitoring
Health Systems 137
Annex E. UgandaHealthSystemAssessment Dissemination,
Validation, and Prioritization Workshop Participants, March
13–14, 2012 141
Annex F. References 144
[...]... implementation arrangements UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 XXIII FRAMEWORK FOR THE HEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT APPROACH The assessment approach was adapted from USAID‟s Health Systems Assessment Approach: A How-To Manual (Islam 2007), the use of which has been documented in more than 25 developing countries The Health Systems Assessment Approach is based on the WHO health systems framework of six building... this assessment Dr Asuman Lukwago Permanent Secretary, Ministry of HealthUGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 XV EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This HealthSystemAssessment (HSA) was carried out to identify strengths and challenges of the Ugandan health system, and to make recommendations for interventions to strengthen the system It has three specific objectives: First, it provides a baseline for monitoring health. .. in 2010/11, and led the Uganda HSA in collaboration with Health Systems 20/20 In addition, technical support and guidance was provided by Health Systems 20/20 HSS specialists The core Uganda HSA assessment team comprised: Health Systems 20/20 team leader Health Systems 20/20 team coordinator MakSPH leads and research assistants for each building block module HEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT PROCESS The... Management Information SystemHealth Metrics Network Health Policy Advisory Committee Human Resources for Health Human Resources Management HealthSystemAssessmentHealth Service Commission HealthSystem Strengthening Health Sector Strategic and Investment Plan UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 XI HSSP HTI HUMC IDSR IFMS IMNCI IPT IRS ITN JMS LIC LMIS MakSPH MCC MDG MEEPP MMP MoFPED MoH MTEF NCD... Strengthening Uganda s healthsystem requires an understanding of its unique strengths and weaknesses This HealthSystemAssessment (HSA) will provide an overview of key system functions organized around six technical modules, which are aligned with the World Health Organization‟s (WHO‟s) healthsystem building blocks: Governance; Health Financing; Service Delivery; Human Resources for Health (HRH);... sectors 2 The Government of Uganda refers to for-profit health care businesses as “Private Health Practitioners” (“PHP”) This assessment report uses the terms private for-profit health care providers (PFP) and commercial health care providers to refer to those health care service providers, labs, pharmacies, etc., that operate on a for-profit basis 1 UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 7 FIGURE 1.4: ORGANIZATION... strengthening the Ugandan healthsystem These are listed and summarized here at a high level only In Chapter 8, the recommendations are organized around short-term (next 12 to 18 months) and medium-term to longterm (next 12 to 36 months), to help planning and implementation UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 XIX A RE-ALIGN HEALTH SECTOR RESOURCES TO FOCUS ON THE POOR Cross-cutting finding: The health system. .. and planning XXII UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 INTRODUCTION AND METHODOLOGY As the global community continues to scale up health interventions for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis (TB), malaria, and other priority areas, it is essential to understand the state of the health systems in which these services are being delivered Good health systems should deliver effective, safe, quality health services to... 7.2: Summary of Findings: Health Information Systems 103 UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 IX LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1: Conceptual Framework for Health Systems Performance xxiv Figure 1.1: Map of Uganda 1 Figure 1.2: Proportion of Cases Among Leading Causes of Morbidity, 2010/11 3 Figure 1.3: Top 10 Causes of Hospital-Based Mortality (All Ages) in Uganda, 2010/11 ... Indicators World Health Organization Yellow Star Program UGANDAHEALTHSYSTEMASSESSMENT2011 XIII ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Multiple organizations and individuals contributed to this healthsystem assessment, from its inception to the production of this report All their contributions are hereby acknowledged Special thanks go to Makerere University School of Public Health, which is the main author of this assessment . Ministry of Health, Health Systems 20/20, and Makerere University School of Public Health. April 2012. Uganda Health System Assessment 2011. Kampala, Uganda and Bethesda, MD: Health Systems 20/20. Findings: Health Information Systems 103 X UGANDA HEALTH SYSTEM ASSESSMENT 2011 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1: Conceptual Framework for Health Systems Performance xxiv Figure 1.1: Map of Uganda. Commission HSS Health System Strengthening HSSIP Health Sector Strategic and Investment Plan XII UGANDA HEALTH SYSTEM ASSESSMENT 2011 HSSP Health Sector Strategic Plan HTI Health Training