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Egypt Health Sector Reform

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Title: Egypt Health Sector Reform


1
Egypt Health Sector Reform
  • A Best Practice Case of EC World Bank
    Collaboration

2
Political Background
  • In 1996 a dynamic new Minister of Health was
    appointed, who wanted to reform the health system
  • Given Egypts political importance, some 22
    donors where active in the health sector, and
    there was a very active donor group chaired by
    DANIDA
  • Among the donors, USAID had been one of the most
    active in terms of spending with multi-million
    dollar grant programs heavily targeted in
    reproductive health, primary care, information
    systems, cost recovery for hospital services, and
    developing a framework for health reform
    strategies
  • There was political commitment to expand social
    health insurance to new groups
  • In the early 1990s only 6 out of 60 million
    Egyptians were covered, then 12 million students
    were added over three years, which exacerbated
    the financial strain

3
Political Background
  • While there had been significant reforms in the
    maternal and child health area, very little had
    been done at the systems level, perhaps because
    total health spending being less than 4 percent
    of GDP with only 40 percent public was not
    perceived as a drain on the public budget (about
    4 percent of the GOE budget)
  • Given the interests of the new Minister as well
    as the strategic importance of Egypt in MENA
    (both politically and size wise), the Bank, EC,
    USAID, and DANIDA were particularly interested in
    assisting the GOE in the development of a
    comprehensive but phased reform strategy which
    could also serve as the base to coordinate the
    support of all 22 donors
  • While the system had certain strengths, despite
    the low levels of spending, the system had
    significant structural weaknesses

4
Health System Was Fragmented and Complex
5
Strengths of System
  • Access to health care was a basic right for all
    Egyptians
  • 95 percent of the population had physical access
    to care
  • The MOHP functioned as the social safety net
    insurer for the entire population
  • There was an extensive health infrastructure
  • State of the art technology and pharmaceuticals
    were generally available
  • Over 80 percent of the population had access to
    safe water and sanitation
  • 80 percent of children were immunized
  • Population growth had been brought down
    significantly

6
System Deficiencies
  • Health outcomes were mediocre with large regional
    disparities
  • The organization and management of the system was
    fragmented and inefficient
  • Too little was spent on health
  • Money was spent on health inefficiently and
    inequitably
  • The system was financed inequitably (over half
    the population had no formal insurance coverage,
    largely the unemployed, informal sector workers,
    farmers, housewives, and children not attending
    school)
  • There were too many beds (hospital occupancy rate
    below 40) and physicians (four times as many as
    other comparable income countries) yet, there
    were serious shortages in some rural areas
    creating access problems
  • Quality of care in public and private sectors was
    problematic
  • There were few incentives for efficiency
  • There were efficiency and quality problems in the
    pharmaceutical sector

7
Need for Reform
  • Health outcomes needed to be improved
  • Organizational structure and management of the
    system needed to be reformed
  • The financing system needed to be more equitable
    and efficient
  • The service delivery system needed to be
    restructured
  • The distribution, efficiency, and quality of the
    human resource base needed to be improved
  • The pharmaceutical sector needed to be more
    efficient and of higher quality

8
Donor GOE Process
  • EC, Bank, USAID, and DANIDA (D-4) indicated an
    interest to work together with the GOE to develop
    a comprehensive health sector reform program
    (HSRP)
  • These organizations brought in 20 staff and
    consultants to work with 50 Egyptians who had
    been assigned by the Minister to one of 6 working
    groups -- management and organization, health
    services, health infrastructure, human resources,
    the pharmaceutical sector, and health care
    financing

9
Donor GOE Process
  • Technical advisors from the D-4 donors assisting
    Egyptian work group chairpersons and group
    members produced six detailed papers laying out
    the reform programs in the six areas
  • The six papers were all based on a thorough
    situation analysis and spelled out in varying
    degrees of detail the policy reform needs and
    strategic options
  • There was ownership by the work groups, and the
    papers reflected input by the Minister who was
    briefed by each work group halfway through the
    process
  • The Minister was also briefed at the end of the
    process, where he provided the strategic policy
    directions based on the analyses and options
    contained in the six papers
  • The entire 22 donor community was briefed several
    times by the D-4

10
Results
  • The six papers were combined into a 200 page HSRP
    which also dealt with the cross cutting issues
  • The HSRP was the first comprehensive health
    reform strategy developed by the Egyptian's that
    addressed all aspects of health sector reform
    needs
  • The GOE adopted the HSRP as its reform program
  • Both the D-4 and the Minster briefed all 22 of
    the donors to indicate the priorities, coordinate
    efforts and eliminate duplication

11
Project Features of First Phase of the Reform
  • Provide universal access to a basic package of
    primary care and public health services
  • Restructure and rationalize the primary care
    delivery system through a needs-based master
    planning process
  • Restructure HIO
  • The project would serve as a pilot by being
    implemented in 3 Governorates that represented
    the different regions Alexandria (urban),
    Menoufia (Lower Egypt), and Sohag (Upper Egypt)

12
Bank, EC, and USAID Funded the First Phase of the
Reform
  • Bank, EC, and USAID funded the first phase of the
    reform
  • Bank project provided 90 million in IDA
  • EC provided 110 Euros in the form of parallel
    financing
  • USAID targeted 80 million to support the effort
  • The African Development Bank ultimately invested
    16 million in Suez and Qena based on the same
    reform program

13
Collaboration During Implementation
  • DANDIA and Bank focused on development and
    implementation of a needs-based masterplan
  • USAID focused on the service delivery model
  • EC focused on training and HR
  • Bank and USAID focused on MIS
  • EC and Bank focused on construction and rehab,
    both in Alexandria, Bank in Minoufia, EC in Sohag

14
Project Status
  • Implementation delays caused by internal Egyptian
    politics resulted in the primary insurance
    component being dropped and delays in other
    project components which resulted in both the EU
    and Bank extending their projects
  • The Minister could not get Parliamentary backing
    for the the new health insurance law that would
    have unified the existing fragmented institutions
    and legislation

15
Lessons Learned on Donor Collaboration
  • Donors all had strong interest in investing in
    Egypts health sector
  • Consensus among the D-4 that a significant
    injection of funding in the form of TA in
    upstream policy analysis was a prerequisite for
    establishing the parameters and priorities of
    the reform program
  • The D-4 all provided generous support both
    analytically and financially
  • Working together on the sector work with the
    Government provided a very strong basis for
    collaboration, trust, and ultimately projects

16
Lessons Learned on Donor Collaboration
  • Having a very determined and strong Minister at
    the helm of the MOHP, who was willing to
    aggressively facilitate the process and push his
    own staff and the countrys political leadership,
    was a key ingredient for success
  • Technical credibility, political savvy and
    knowledge of the local situation provided by the
    D-4 based on their different comparative
    advantages and experiences was a winning
    combination
  • The personal chemistry, respect, and trust among
    the leaders of the D-4 helped surmount numerous
    obstacles
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