Indonesia Who is helping and how - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Indonesia Who is helping and how

Description:

Indonesia Who is helping and how – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:114
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: leh71
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Indonesia Who is helping and how


1
IndonesiaWho is helping and how?
  • Colleen Bish
  • Nishika Vidanage
  • April 26, 2007

2
Indonesia
  • A bit of a review
  • Indonesias current population is 234,693,997
    people
  • There are 17,508 islands that make up the country
    of Indonesia, 6000 of these islands are
    inhabited
  • Land Use
  • Arable Land 11.03
  • Permanent Crops 7.04
  • Other 81.93

3
Indonesia
  • RATES!! RATES!! RATES!! RATES!!
  • Birth Rate
  • 19.65 births/1,000
  • Death Rate
  • 6.25 deaths/1,000
  • Infant Mortality Rate
  • Total 32.14 deaths/1,000 live births
  • Male 37.39 deaths/1,000 live births
  • Female 26.63 deaths/ 1,000 live births
  • Fertility Rate
  • 2.38 children born/woman

4
Indonesia
  • Major infectious diseases
  • Food or waterborne diseases
  • Bacterial and protozoal diarrhea
  • Hepatitis A E
  • Typhoid Fever
  • Vectorborne dieseases
  • Dengue fever
  • Malaria
  • Chikungunya
  • Avian Flu

"The Oracle" with tumeric and sandal paste
smeared on her facewas in a trance for about 15
minutes.
5
Indonesia
  • Contributing Factors in healthcare
  • Indonesias GDP 264.4 billion
  • Indonesia has to pay 6.9 billion in interest
    each year on its 61 billion in foreign debts
  • GDP Consumption by sector
  • Agriculture 13.1
  • Industry 46
  • Services 41

6
Indonesia
  • Total health care expenditure
  • Per capita 113
  • As percentage of GDP 3.1
  • Indonesia GNP 174 Billion
  • Total health care expenditure
  • From the GNP 0.7
  • About 3 per capita
  • Unfortunately, the GNP has decreased due to the
    growing population and growing health problems.

7
Health Insurance Indonesia
  • Out of Pocket Expenditure as of Private
    Expenditure on Health 74.3
  • Only 16 of people have insurance
  • Ins Co Askes, Jamsostek
  • Commercial Insurance
  • All others forced to pay by
  • Personal Savings
  • Credit
  • Borrowing from friends or neighbors

8
Indonesia
  • Government
  • Emphasizes the development of human services as
    an area important to national development.
  • Priority is given to education and healthcare.
  • Policy of zero personnel growth to optimize
    efficiency has been adopted in the public sector
  • Limiting its capacity to open new facilities and
    provide new services.

Secretary Rice With Indonesia President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono
9
Indonesia
  • Health Policies and Strategies
  • A number of innovations have been introduced in
    many areas
  • Manpower planning
  • Nutrition
  • Immunization
  • Water supply
  • Generic drugs
  • Healthcare financing
  • District health management

10
Indonesia
  • Implementation of the zero growth policy for
    civil servants has negatively affected the
    recruitment of doctors to serve in government
    health centers.
  • MOH has introduced a scheme for employing doctors
    on contract, however this plan is not very
    attractive and does not provide job security.
  • 1992- Health law was passed which mandates
    employers with more than ten employees to provide
    them with some sort of health benefits.

11
Indonesia
  • Intersectoral cooperation
  • Implemented a global strategy on AIDS, the polio
    immunization campaign, rural water supply, and
    sanitation.
  • Coordination meetings are organized by the
    Ministry of Welfare. Despite these efforts,
    negative sectoral attitude still remain, as well
    as resistance to working with NGOs and the
    private sector.

12
Indonesia
  • Managerial Process
  • Ministry of Health
  • Works to meet specific provincial considerations
    and needs.
  • Bottom-up planning is encouraged through
    coordination meetings and each managerial and
    service level.
  • The main constraint is the lack of managerial
    expertise at the various levels and willingness
    to assume responsibilities conferred through the
    decentralization process.

13
Indonesia
  • Community Action
  • There has been an increase in community, NGO and
    private sector participation in health
    development.
  • Examples of such participation include assistance
    in the implementation of national health
    programs
  • Ex immunization, AIDS control, disease control

14
Indonesia
  • Health research and technology
  • National Institute of Health Research and
    Development (NIHRD) is obliged to provide
    guidance for research and development activities
    within the scope of MOH.
  • Research outcomes reported and utilized in
    following areas
  • Communicable diseases, anemia, vitamin A
    fortification, protein-energy malnutrition
    (PEM).

15
Indonesia
  • Healthy Indonesia 2010 campaign
  • Ministry of Health, Health Working Group,
    international donors
  • Goals
  • Reduce financial vulnerability
  • Optimize participation and efforts of NGOs
  • Decentralize health care system
  • Improve allocation of resources promise
    resources to health programs
  • Ensure access to affordable, quality care
  • Engage stake holders to ensure accountability

HELP THE POOR!!
16
Indonesia
17
Indonesia
  • Provision of irrigation, clean water, and basic
    sanitation shall be prioritized
  • Construction of roads, bridges, and ports in
    isolated and poor regions
  • Funding to the regions with low income, by using
    the instrument of Special Funding Allocation (DAK)
  • Improve access and extension of learning
    opportunities for all school-age children,
    targeting mainly at those in poor, isolated, and
    remote areas.
  • Improvement of quality and relevance of basic
    education of implementing educational standard
    national as reference and legal guidance for
    improving the quality of nation education, which
    also covers the quality of teachers and
    educational staff, the quality of school
    facilities and infrastructure, competency of the
    graduates, educational budget, and education
    evaluation.

18
Indonesia
  • Improving women's involvement in political
    process and public position
  • Improving education and health services along
    with other development areas to improve women's
    quality of life
  • Revising legal instruments to protect women
    against violence, exploitation, and discrimination
  • Providing access to primary health services,
    basic obstetric care, nutrition improvement,
    revitalization of integrated service post,
    diseases control, revitalization of food and
    nutrition surveillance system.
  • Accessibility to health protection programs for
    the poor, using insurance systems with the
    premiums being paid by the government.

19
Indonesia
  • Improve quantity, network, and quality of health
    centers
  • Improve quality and quantity of health personnel
  • Improvement of reproductive health services and
    family planning centers
  • Making Pregnancy Safer campaign increase
    access and coverage to medical care for mothers
    and infants, encourage women empowerment
  • Develop system of health insurance premiums paid
    by government
  • Improve access and quality of reproductive health
    services
  • Strengthened treatment and support for those with
    HIV/AIDS
  • Create more referred hospitals and new rehab
    centers
  • Provide full subsidy of ARVs, TB meds, and HIV
    testing reagents
  • Roll Back Malaria campaign
  • Insecticide treated bed nets
  • Gerdunas (Nat. Integrated Movement for Control of
    Tuberculosis) promote acceleration of TB control
    and treatment
  • Free medical exams, medicines, and treatment of
    TB to poor
  • Tobacco Use high prices taxes, limitation of
    advertising, smoke free locations

20
Indonesia
  • Eradication of illegal logging
  • Forest rehabilitation programs
  • Promotion of alternative, efficient, eco-friendly
    energy sources
  • Eliminate use of ODS by 2010
  • Commit more efforts to providing safe drinking
    water
  • Enhance community awareness of healthy lifestyle
    to promote sanitation
  • One Million Houses Development National
    Movement
  • Develop housing micro credit schemes
  • Settlement of foreign debts through international
    agreements
  • Support quota-free and duty-free access to export
    for less developed countries
  • Global partnerships Debt swap for MDGs should be
    fully supported
  • Participation in Non-alignment Movement Centre
    for South-South Technical Cooperation (NAM
    CSSTC)
  • Partnerships with all developed and developing
    countries including all stakeholders, private
    sector, and civil society
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com