Agriteam Canada - Building Capacity and Opportunities for Change

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Pakistan, Province of Punjab, Systems-Oriented Health Investment Program (SOHIP): January 2006–December 2010

Sector: Health and Population
Region: South Asia
Funded by:
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
Total Value: C$12 million (Canadian contribution: Agriteam component: C$7 million; multilateral grants/contribution component C$5 million)
Partners and Counterparts:
In Pakistan, the project’s main counterparts are the Department of Health, provincial Government of Punjab, and the Departments of Health in the District Governments of Pakpattan Mianwali.

Purpose

To support the implementation of decentralized health services—with particular attention to women’s health—through systems strengthening within a health promotion framework.

Challenge

The Government of Pakistan implemented a devolution program in 2001, under which local governments at the district level became much more autonomous. Responsibility for planning and delivery of health services was transferred to district governments. The new system was intended to bring decision-making closer to the beneficiaries of public services and ensure citizens’ involvement in planning and implementation of those services.

However, studies undertaken several years after the beginning of devolution showed that many of its potential benefits had yet to be realized, particularly in terms of increased local accountability and improved management. At the district level, there is still only limited capacity for evidence-based planning; inadequate use of data from the health management information system; a lack of attention to health education and the monitoring and supervision of health promotion activities; and a continued emphasis of curative services over preventive care, to the detriment of the latter.

Approach

SOHIP is designed to take a systems approach: strengthening the structures behind service delivery by improving attention to health promotion at the district level as well as strengthening the management domain of public services. Capacity development activities are complemented by efforts to ensure systems and policies become more supportive of new ways of working, so people can apply improved capacity in a sustainable way. There are a number of significant government and donor-financed health reform efforts happening in parallel in Punjab province, and SOHIP takes a very collaborative approach with respect to these efforts.

Project Description

The planned outcome result for SOHIP is strengthened management and accountability systems for the effective delivery of gender-sensitive, pro-poor health services integrating prevention and health promotion.

SOHIP operates at three levels:

  1. At the district level through intensive activities in our two demonstration districts
  2. At the inter-district level to promote exchange of information, ideas and innovations between districts
  3. At the provincial level to provide systems and structures that can better support improved health management at the district level

SOHIP is working to:

Note: Design phase: January 2005–August 2006; implementation phase September 2006–June 2010

Results

Canadian Project Manager

Morag Humble
mhumble@agriteam.ca