TY - JOUR
T1 - Reorienting health systems towards Primary Health Care in South Asia
AU - Perera, Susie
AU - Ramani, Sudha
AU - Joarder, Taufique
AU - Shukla, Rajendra S.
AU - Zaidi, Shehla
AU - Wellappuli, Nalinda
AU - Ahmed, Syed Masud
AU - Neupane, Dinesh
AU - Prinja, Shankar
AU - Amatya, Archana
AU - Rao, Krishna D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - This series, “Primary health care in South Asia”, is an effort to provide region-specific, evidence-based insights for reorienting health systems towards PHC. Led by regional thinkers, this series draws lessons from five countries in South Asia: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. This is the last paper in the series that outlines points for future action. We call for action in three areas. First, the changing context in the region, with respect to epidemiological shifts, urbanisation, and privatisation, presents an important opportunity to appraise existing policies on PHC and reformulate them to meet the evolving needs of communities. Second, reorienting health systems towards PHC requires concrete efforts on three pillars-integrated services, multi-sectoral collaboration, and community empowerment. This paper collates nine action points that cut across these three pillars. These action points encompass contextualising policies on PHC, scaling up innovations, allocating adequate financial resources, strengthening the governance function of health ministries, establishing meaningful public-private engagements, using digital health tools, reorganising service delivery, enabling effective change–management processes, and encouraging practice-oriented research. Finally, we call for more research-policy-practice networks on PHC in South Asia that can generate evidence, bolster advocacy, and provide spaces for cross-learning. Funding: WHO SEARO funded this paper. This source did not play any role in the design, analysis or preparation of the manuscript.
AB - This series, “Primary health care in South Asia”, is an effort to provide region-specific, evidence-based insights for reorienting health systems towards PHC. Led by regional thinkers, this series draws lessons from five countries in South Asia: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. This is the last paper in the series that outlines points for future action. We call for action in three areas. First, the changing context in the region, with respect to epidemiological shifts, urbanisation, and privatisation, presents an important opportunity to appraise existing policies on PHC and reformulate them to meet the evolving needs of communities. Second, reorienting health systems towards PHC requires concrete efforts on three pillars-integrated services, multi-sectoral collaboration, and community empowerment. This paper collates nine action points that cut across these three pillars. These action points encompass contextualising policies on PHC, scaling up innovations, allocating adequate financial resources, strengthening the governance function of health ministries, establishing meaningful public-private engagements, using digital health tools, reorganising service delivery, enabling effective change–management processes, and encouraging practice-oriented research. Finally, we call for more research-policy-practice networks on PHC in South Asia that can generate evidence, bolster advocacy, and provide spaces for cross-learning. Funding: WHO SEARO funded this paper. This source did not play any role in the design, analysis or preparation of the manuscript.
KW - Alma Ata
KW - Astana
KW - Bangladesh
KW - Call to action
KW - Chronic diseases
KW - Community health workers
KW - Comprehensive primary health care
KW - Health policy
KW - Health systems
KW - India
KW - Nepal
KW - Pakistan
KW - Primary Health Care
KW - Private sector
KW - South Asia
KW - Sri Lanka
KW - Urban
KW - Way forward
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202870215&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.lansea.2024.100466
DO - 10.1016/j.lansea.2024.100466
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85202870215
SN - 2772-3682
VL - 28
JO - The Lancet Regional Health - Southeast Asia
JF - The Lancet Regional Health - Southeast Asia
M1 - 100466
ER -