Abstract

BackgroundPlanning for the implementation of community scorecards (CSC) is an important, though seldom documented process. Makerere University School of Public Health (MakSPH) and Future Health Systems Consortium set out to develop and test a sustainable and scalable CSC model. This paper documents the process of planning and adapting the design of the CSC, incorporating key domains of the scalable model such as embeddedness, legitimacy, feasibility and ownership, challenges encountered in this process and how they were mitigated.MethodsThe CSC intervention comprised of five rounds of scoring in five sub counties and one town council of Kibuku district. Data was drawn from ten focus group discussions, seven key informant interviews with local and sub national leaders, and one reflection meeting with the project team from MakSPH. More data was abstracted from notes of six quarterly stakeholder meetings and six quarterly project meetings. Data was analyzed using a thematic approach, drawing constructs outlined in the project’s theory of change.ResultsEmbeddedness, legitimacy and ownership were promoted through aligning the model with existing processes and systems as well as the meaningful and strategic involvement of stakeholders and leaders at local and sub national level. The challenges encountered included limited technical capacity of stakeholders facilitating the CSC, poor functionality of existing community engagement platforms, and difficulty in promoting community participation without financial incentives. However, these challenges were mitigated through adjustments to the intervention design based on the feedback received.ConclusionGovernments seeking to scale up CSCs and to take scale to account should keenly adapt existing models to the local implementation context with strategic and meaningful involvement of key legitimate local and sub national leaders in decision making during the design and implementation process. However, they should watch out for elite capture and develop mitigating strategies. Social accountability practitioners should document their planning and adaptive design efforts to share good practices and lessons learned. Enhancing local capacity to implement CSCs should be ensured through use of existing local structures and provision of technical support by external or local partners familiar with the skill until the local partners are competent.

Highlights

  • For decades governments in low income countries have failed to provide poor populations with adequate social services to meet their needs [1, 2]

  • Theory of change for community score card (CSC) implementation The planning phase was guided by a theory of change, whose development was guided by previously published scaling up frameworks [17, 18, 30,31,32,33], in particular the Expand Net framework [34], the Future Health Systems (FHS) project institutionalization framework [35] as well as project wide discussions

  • Ownership of CSC To promote ownership of the CSC process two main actions were taken by the Makerere University School of Public Health (MakSPH) team, firstly a wide range of leaders from different levels at the district were engaged throughout the planning, design and implementation process

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Summary

Introduction

For decades governments in low income countries have failed to provide poor populations with adequate social services to meet their needs [1, 2]. The community score card (CSC) is one of the social accountability tools that has been employed to monitor the availability, access and quality of social services [3, 4]. In Uganda several social accountability initiatives have been implemented These include citizen report cards, health unit management committees as well as CSCs [14, 15]. Planning for the implementation of community scorecards (CSC) is an important, though seldom documented process. Makerere University School of Public Health (MakSPH) and Future Health Systems Consortium set out to develop and test a sustainable and scalable CSC model. This paper documents the process of planning and adapting the design of the CSC, incorporating key domains of the scalable model such as embeddedness, legitimacy, feasibility and ownership, challenges encountered in this process and how they were mitigated

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