Prioritizing Surgical Care on National Health Agendas: A Qualitative Case Study of Papua New Guinea, Uganda, and Sierra Leone

被引:20
作者
Dare, Anna J. [1 ]
Lee, Katherine C. [2 ]
Bleicher, Josh [2 ]
Elobu, Alex E. [3 ]
Kamara, Thaim B. [4 ]
Liko, Osborne [5 ]
Luboga, Samuel [6 ]
Danlop, Akule [5 ]
Kune, Gabriel [5 ]
Hagander, Lars [7 ]
Leather, Andrew J. M. [1 ]
Yamey, Gavin [8 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London & Kings Hlth Partners, Kings Ctr Global Hlth, London, England
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Global Hlth Sci, Global Hlth Grp, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[3] Mulago Hosp, Dept Surg, Kampala, Uganda
[4] Univ Sierra Leone, Coll Med & Allied Hlth Sci, Dept Surg, Freetown, Sierra Leone
[5] Port Moresby Gen Hosp, Dept Surg, Port Moresby, Papua N Guinea
[6] Makerere Univ, Coll Hlth Sci, Dept Anat, Kampala, Uganda
[7] Lund Univ, Dept Clin Sci Lund, Lund, Sweden
[8] Duke Univ, Duke Global Hlth Inst, Durham, NC USA
基金
比尔及梅琳达.盖茨基金会;
关键词
GENERATING POLITICAL PRIORITY; GLOBAL HEALTH; SURGERY; EMERGENCY; CAPACITY; BURDEN; CHALLENGES; ATTENTION; COUNTRIES; DISEASES;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pmed.1002023
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Little is known about the social and political factors that influence priority setting for different health services in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), yet these factors are integral to understanding how national health agendas are established. We investigated factors that facilitate or prevent surgical care from being prioritized in LMICs. Methods and Findings We undertook country case studies in Papua New Guinea, Uganda, and Sierra Leone, using a qualitative process-tracing method. We conducted 74 semi-structured interviews with stakeholders involved in health agenda setting and surgical care in these countries. Interviews were triangulated with published academic literature, country reports, national health plans, and policies. Data were analyzed using a conceptual framework based on four components (actor power, ideas, political contexts, issue characteristics) to assess national factors influencing priority for surgery. Political priority for surgical care in the three countries varies. Priority was highest in Papua New Guinea, where surgical care is firmly embedded within national health plans and receives significant domestic and international resources, and much lower in Uganda and Sierra Leone. Factors influencing whether surgical care was prioritized were the degree of sustained and effective domestic advocacy by the local surgical community, the national political and economic environment in which health policy setting occurs, and the influence of international actors, particularly donors, on national agenda setting. The results from Papua New Guinea show that a strong surgical community can generate priority from the ground up, even where other factors are unfavorable. Conclusions National health agenda setting is a complex social and political process. To embed surgical care within national health policy, sustained advocacy efforts, effective framing of the problem and solutions, and country-specific data are required. Political, technical, and financial support from regional and international partners is also important.
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页数:25
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