Abstract

There is an emergency in the Nigerian primary health care (PHC) system. Majority of PHC facilities are in a sordid and lugubrious state (1). Despite substantial government spending and policy initiatives toward revitalizing the PHC system, it remains largely deplorable across the World Health Organization (WHO) health system building blocks (2). To this end, the government of Nigeria in collaboration with the World Bank launched a Results-Based Financing (RBF) project under the Project Name: Nigeria State Health Investment Project (NSHIP) with the goal of improving service utilization and quality of healthcare services in Nigeria (2, 3). Due lack of in-country capacity, Oxford Policy Management (OPM) was contracted by National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) in 2014 to provide technical assistance to NSHIP for the implementation of RBF in Nigeria. In order to bridge the capacity gap at the exit of OPM in 2018, Nigerian Results-Based Financing Fellowship was conceptualized jointly by OPM and NPHCDA to train 14 Nigerians to a level whereby they are able to take on technical assistance roles in NPHCDA for continued implementation and possible scale-up of RBF in Nigeria (4). This paper describes the 10-months RBF fellowship, the competencies acquired and its usefulness as strategic approach for the sustainability of RBF in Nigeria.

Highlights

  • There is an emergency in the Nigerian primary health care (PHC) system

  • In order to bridge the capacity gap at the exit of Oxford Policy Management (OPM) in 2018, Nigerian Results-Based Financing Fellowship was conceptualized jointly by OPM and National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) to train 14 Nigerians to a level whereby they are able to take on technical assistance roles in NPHCDA for continued implementation and possible scale-up of RBF in Nigeria [4]

  • This paper describes the 10-months RBF fellowship, the competencies acquired and its usefulness as strategic approach for the sustainability of RBF in Nigeria

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Summary

Introduction

There is an emergency in the Nigerian primary health care (PHC) system. Majority of PHC facilities are in a sordid and lugubrious state [1]. Despite substantial government spending and policy initiatives toward revitalizing the PHC system, it remains largely deplorable across the World Health Organization (WHO) health system building blocks [2]. To this end, the government of Nigeria in collaboration with the World Bank launched a Results-Based Financing (RBF) project under the Project Name: Nigeria State Health Investment Project (NSHIP) with the goal of improving service utilization and quality of healthcare services in Nigeria [2, 3]. Due lack of in-country capacity, Oxford Policy Management (OPM) was contracted by National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) in 2014 to provide technical assistance to NSHIP for the implementation of RBF in Nigeria. This paper describes the 10-months RBF fellowship, the competencies acquired and its usefulness as strategic approach for the sustainability of RBF in Nigeria

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