Abstract

Introduction: The provision of health care services in Kenya was devolved from the national government to the counties in 2013. Evidence suggests that health system performance in Kenya remains poor. The main issue is poor leadership resulting in poor health system performance. However, most training in Kenya focuses on “leaders” (individual) development as opposed to “leadership” training (development of groups from an organization). The purpose of that study was to explore the impact of leadership training on health system performance in selected counties in Kenya.Methods: A quasi-experimental time-series design was employed. Pretest, posttest control-group design was utilized to find out whether the leadership development program positively contributed to the improvement of health system performance indicators compared with the non-trained managers. Questionnaires were administered to 31 trained health managers from the public, private for-profit, and private not-for-profit health institutions within the same counties.Results: The pretest and posttest means for all the six health system (HS) pillar indicators of the treatment group were higher than those of the control group. The regression method to estimate the DID structural model used to calculate the “fact” and “counterfactual” revealed that training had a positive impact on the intended outcome on the service delivery, information, leadership and governance, human resources, finance, and medical products with impact value ≥1 (57.2).Conclusion: The study findings support both hypotheses that trained health care management teams had a significant difference in the implementation status of priority projects and, hence, had a significant impact on health system performance indicators compared with non-trained managers.

Highlights

  • The provision of health care services in Kenya was devolved from the national government to the counties in 2013

  • Building on our earlier study [15] and our most recent study on “Effect of project-based experiential learning on the health service delivery indicators: a quasi-experiment study” [32], the current study focused on the entire health system pillars

  • The current study objective aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the leadership training on health system performance indicators from the implemented priority projects

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The provision of health care services in Kenya was devolved from the national government to the counties in 2013. The purpose of that study was to explore the impact of leadership training on health system performance in selected counties in Kenya. Despite the significant investment of about $8 trillion in global health care spending, millions of people, especially from the developing countries, still die each year from preventable causes [1]. This has been attributed, among other factors, to the fact that a majority of the people responsible for leading, managing, and governing health care have little or no preparation to succeed in this. When people who govern, managers, service providers, patients, and community members consistently practice good leadership, this will result in a healthier population [7,8,9].

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call