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Malaria control reinvented: health sector reform and strategy development in Colombia.

TLDR
The consequences of health sector reforms on control of malaria were analyzed using Colombia as an example as mentioned in this paper, where a series of studies was undertaken in 1998-2000 at the national level (Ministry of Health Study), at the state level (Departamento Study) and at the health district level (District Study) using formal and informal interviews among control staff and document analysis as data collection tools.
Abstract
The consequences of health sector reforms on control of malaria were analysed using Colombia as an example. One of the most complex health sector reform programmes in Latin America took place in the 1990s; it included transferring the vertical vector-borne disease control (VBDC) programme into health systems at state and district levels. A series of studies was undertaken in 1998-2000 at the national level (Ministry of Health Study), at the state level (Departamento Study) and at the health district level (District Study) using formal and informal interviews among control staff and document analysis as data collection tools. A government-financed national training programme for VBDC staff - which included direct observation of control operations - was also used to analyse health workers' performance in the postreform period (longitudinal study). The results showed that some shortcomings of the old vertical system, such as the negative aspects of trade union activity, have not been overcome while some positive aspects of the old system, such as capacity building, operational planning and supervision have been lost. This has contributed to a decrease in control activity which, in turn, has been associated with more malaria cases. Malaria control had to be reinvented at a much larger scale than anticipated by the reformers caused by a whole series of problems: complex financing of public health interventions in the new system, massive staff reductions, the difficulty of gaining access to district and state budgets, redefining entire organizations and - in addition to the reforms - introducing alternative strategies based on insecticide-treated materials and the growth of areas of general insecurity in many parts of Colombia itself. However, positive signs in the transformed system include: the strengthening of central control staff (albeit insufficient in numbers) when transferred from the Ministry of Health to the National Institute of Health, the opportunities offered by the Basic Health Plan (PAB) for new planning initiatives and intersectoral co-operation and the integration of malaria diagnosis and treatment into the general health services (associated with a decrease of malaria mortality). The potentials of the new system have not yet been fully exploited: capacity building, communication and management skills need to be improved and it require guidance from the national level.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Colombia: in vivo test of health sector privatization in the developing world.

TL;DR: A review of the literature shows that the proposed goals of universal coverage and equitable access to high-quality care have not been reached as mentioned in this paper, despite an explosion in costs and a considerable increase in public and private health expenditure, more than 40 percent of the population is still not covered by health insurance, and access to health care proves uncreasingly difficult.
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Decentralization of health systems in low and middle income countries: a systematic review.

TL;DR: Overall, lessons learned from LMICs suggest that factors such as adequate mix of technical skills at the local level to perform decentralized tasks, effective decentralization of decision-making to the periphery, and political leadership are key factors for a successful decentralization.
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Tuberculosis control and managed competition in Colombia.

TL;DR: Recommendations are to restructure the reform's public health component, strengthen the technical capacity in public health of the state, mainly at the local and departmental levels, and to improve the health information system by reorienting its objectives to public health goals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of how the health systems context shapes responses to the control of human immunodeficiency virus: case-studies from the Russian Federation

TL;DR: A methodology and an instrument that allow the simultaneous rapid and systematic examination of the broad public health context, the health care systems, and the features of disease-specific programmes for tackling communicable disease are developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revenue-driven in TB control--three cases in China.

TL;DR: For all models that control and case management approaches were, to some extent, adapted to generate maximum income to the providers, the drive for income led to fewer cases detected, administration of unnecessary procedures and drugs, and a higher than necessary cost to the patients.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Community participation and control of endemic diseases in Brazil: problems and possibilities

TL;DR: Several examples and situations of community participation in Brazilian endemic diseases are described and discussed in this paper, where community participation is considered one of the most important elements for the control of endemic diseases in poor countries.
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Insecticide-impregnated bed nets for malaria control : varying experiences from Ecuador, Colombia, and Peru concerning acceptability and effectiveness

TL;DR: Important factors for the success of the bed net program were insect susceptibility to pyrethroids, high coverage with impregnated bed nets, high malaria incidence, good community participation, high mosquito densities when people go to bed, and a high proportion of Plasmodium falciparum.
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Transformation of ministries of health in the era of health reform: the case of Colombia.

TL;DR: A combined approach to improving public management through a focus on creating 'public value' and improving institutional performance through strengthening the 'task networks' of organizations needed to achieve strategic objectives is used.
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Insecticide-treated materials for malaria control in Latin America: to use or not to use?

TL;DR: The comparison with other P. vivax endemic areas in Latin America showed that the vector's late biting behaviour and the indoor preference (where ITMs have a repellent effect) probably led to the favourable results in the study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unit costs for house spraying and bednet impregnation with residual insecticides in Colombia: a management tool for the control of vector-borne disease

TL;DR: A study of unit costs and cost components of two malaria-control strategies (house spraying and bednet impregnation with residual insecticides) was undertaken in 11 malaria-endemic states of Colombia, using data provided by control staff on self-administered questionnaires to show that house spraying was generally more expensive for the health services than bednet Impregnation.
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