Abstract

BackgroundIn 2003 the Uganda Ministry of Health (MoH) introduced the District League Table (DLT) to track district performance. This review of the DLT is intended to add to the evidence base on Health Systems Performance Assessment (HSPA) globally, with emphasis on Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs), and provide recommendations for adjustments to the current Ugandan reality.MethodsA normative HSPA framework was used to inform the development of a Key Informant Interview (KII) tool. Thirty Key Informants were interviewed, purposively selected from the Ugandan health system on the basis of having developed or used the DLT. KII data and information from published and grey literature on the Uganda health system was analyzed using deductive analysis.ResultsStakeholder involvement in the development of the DLT was limited, including MoH officials and development partners, and a few district technical managers. Uganda policy documents articulate a conceptually broad health system whereas the DLT focuses on a healthcare system. The complexity and dynamism of the Uganda health system was insufficiently acknowledged by the HSPA framework. Though DLT objectives and indicators were articulated, there was no conceptual reference model and lack of clarity on the constitutive dimensions. The DLT mechanisms for change were not explicit. The DLT compared markedly different districts and did not identify factors behind observed performance. Uganda lacks a designated institutional unit for the analysis and presentation of HSPA data, and there are challenges in data quality and range.ConclusionsThe critique of the DLT using a normative model supported the development of recommendation for Uganda district HSPA and provides lessons for other LMICs. A similar approach can be used by researchers and policy makers elsewhere for the review and development of other frameworks.Adjustments in Uganda district HSPA should consider: wider stakeholder involvement with more district managers including political, administrative and technical; better anchoring within the national health system framework; integration of the notion of complexity in the design of the framework; and emphasis on facilitating district decision-making and learning. There is need to improve data quality and range and additional approaches for data analysis and presentation.

Highlights

  • In 2003 the Uganda Ministry of Health (MoH) introduced the District League Table (DLT) to track district performance

  • In the third stage of the research programme, the findings of the first and second stages will be used to inform the design of an adjusted district Health Systems Performance Assessment (HSPA) framework for Uganda, and to provide lessons for policy makers and researchers in other Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs) seeking to review or develop HSPA frameworks

  • Uganda’s Constitution states ‘the state shall be guided by the principle of decentralization and devolution of government powers to the people at appropriate levels where they can best manage and direct their own affairs’ [11]

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Summary

Introduction

In 2003 the Uganda Ministry of Health (MoH) introduced the District League Table (DLT) to track district performance. This review of the DLT is intended to add to the evidence base on Health Systems Performance Assessment (HSPA) globally, with emphasis on Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs), and provide recommendations for adjustments to the current Ugandan reality. Uganda is a low income country (LIC) in sub-Sahara Africa with a Gross National Income (GNI) per capita of current US $ 670 (2014) and a high burden of disease (both communicable and non-communicable) [8]. The district is responsible for operational planning and management of health services, and carries the responsibility for inter-sectoral coordination of activities designed to improve population health [12]

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