期刊论文详细信息
Conflict and Health
The impact of decentralisation on health systems in fragile and post-conflict countries: a narrative synthesis of six case studies in the Indo-Pacific
Research
Seye Abimbola1  Elliot Brennan1 
[1] Sydney School of Public Health Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Edward Ford Building A27, 2006, Sydney, NSW, Australia;
关键词: Health;    Health system;    Fragile;    Conflict;    Peacebuilding;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s13031-023-00528-7
 received in 2022-12-13, accepted in 2023-06-14,  发布年份 2023
来源: Springer
PDF
【 摘 要 】

A health system has three key stakeholders, the State—at national and subnational levels—the health service providers and the citizens. In most settings and especially in peacetime, these stakeholders are typically well-defined. In contrast, during conflict and crisis as well as during ceasefire and post-conflict peacebuilding, stakeholders in the health system are often more diverse and contested. Health systems in such settings tend to be more decentralised, de facto—often in addition to de jure decentralisation. Despite much debate on the potential benefits of decentralisation, assessing its impact on health system performance remains difficult and its effect is open to dispute in the literature. This narrative synthesis aims to support efforts to assess and make sense of how decentralisation impacts health system performance in fragile and post-conflict countries—by synthesising evidence on the impact of decentralisation on health system performance from six country case studies: Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Indonesia, Pakistan, Myanmar and Nepal. The impact of decentralisation on health system performance is optimised when combining centralisation (e.g., the benefits of central coordination in improving efficiency) with decentralisation (e.g., the benefits of local decision making in improving equity and resilience). The findings may inform efforts to think through what to centralise or decentralise, the impacts of those choices, and how the impact may change over time as countries go through and emerge from conflict—and as they go through and recover from the Covid-19 pandemic and prepare for future pandemics.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© The Author(s) 2023

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