创新制度化:口服补液盐和锌联合包装从试点到规模化--赞比亚案例研究》。

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Global Health: Science and Practice Pub Date : 2024-02-28 DOI:10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00286
Jane Berry, Simon Berry, Elizabeth Chizema, Bonface Fundafunda, Davidson H Hamer, Stephen Tembo, Rohit Ramchandani
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们记录了赞比亚针对 5 岁以下儿童腹泻治疗的卫生创新的发展和制度化:独特的口服补液盐和锌 (ORSZ) 联合包装。世界卫生组织/ExpandNet 提出的七项建议被用来回顾性地分析和描述这一创新从概念阶段开始的成功推广,包括在国内的推广以及政策、制度和监管方面的变化。7 项建议包括使用参与式流程、根据国家具体情况进行调整、设计研究以测试创新、测试创新、确定成功因素以及扩大规模。在赞比亚,联合包装 ORSZ 的推广具有可持续性。在 2018 年捐赠资金结束五年后,一家独立的当地制造商继续在商业上可行的基础上向私营和公共部门提供产品。此外,ORSZ 的全国覆盖率从 2012 年的不到 1%增至 2018 年的 34%。一个关键的成功因素是,由卫生部主持的学习和指导小组在 8 年的时间里持续提供便利(跨越规划、试验、评估和推广),该小组向所有人开放,并侧重于学习成果的转让以及与其他倡议的持续协调。其他成功因素还包括:与所有主要利益相关方进行了长期的包容性初步磋商、构思和规划,以利用和调动现有资源、知识、结构和系统;与政府政策保持一致;在扩大规模前对产品及其价值链进行彻底测试和全面审查,包括制造、分销、政策和监管事项;以及政府采取共同包装战略,确保儿童腹泻病例得到 ORSZ 治疗。在对当地情况进行适当调整后,可在其他中低收入国家推广这种扩大规模的方法,将其作为扩大 ORSZ 和其他潜在保健产品覆盖面的战略。
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Institutionalizing Innovation: From Pilot to Scale for Co-Packaged Oral Rehydration Salts and Zinc-A Case Study in Zambia.

We document the development and institutionalization in Zambia of a health innovation for diarrhea treatment aimed at children aged younger than 5 years: a unique oral rehydration salts and zinc (ORSZ) co-pack. Seven recommendations from the World Health Organization/ExpandNet are used retrospectively to analyze and describe the successful scale-up of this innovation from its concept stage, including in-country expansion and policy, institutional, and regulatory changes. The 7 recommendations comprise using a participatory process, tailoring to the country context, designing research to test the innovation, testing the innovation, identifying success factors, and scaling up. The scale-up of co-packaged ORSZ in Zambia is shown to be sustainable. Five years after donor funding ended in 2018, an independent, local manufacturer continues to supply the private and public sectors on a commercially viable basis. Furthermore, national coverage of ORSZ increased from less than 1% in 2012 to 34% in 2018. A key success factor was the continuous facilitation over 8 years (spanning planning, trial, evaluation, and scale-up) by a learning and steering group chaired by the Ministry of Health, open to all and focused on learning transfer and ongoing alignment with other initiatives. Other success factors included a long lead-in of inclusive initial consultation, ideation, and planning with all key stakeholders to build on and mobilize existing resources, knowledge, structures, and systems; alignment with government policy; thorough testing and radical review of the product and its value chain before scale-up, including manufacture, distribution, policy, and regulatory matters; and adoption by the government of a co-packaging strategy to ensure cases of childhood diarrhea are treated with ORSZ. With appropriate local adaptations, this approach to scale-up could be replicated in other low- and middle-income countries as a strategy to increase coverage of ORSZ and potentially other health products.

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来源期刊
Global Health: Science and Practice
Global Health: Science and Practice Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
7.50%
发文量
178
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Health: Science and Practice (GHSP) is a no-fee, open-access, peer-reviewed, online journal aimed to improve health practice, especially in low- and middle-income countries. Our goal is to reach those who design, implement, manage, evaluate, and otherwise support health programs. We are especially interested in advancing knowledge on practical program implementation issues, with information on what programs entail and how they are implemented. GHSP is currently indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, POPLINE, EBSCO, SCOPUS,. the Web of Science Emerging Sources Citation Index, and the USAID Development Experience Clearinghouse (DEC). TOPICS: Issued four times a year, GHSP will include articles on all global health topics, covering diverse programming models and a wide range of cross-cutting issues that impact and support health systems. Examples include but are not limited to: Health: Addiction and harm reduction, Child Health, Communicable and Emerging Diseases, Disaster Preparedness and Response, Environmental Health, Family Planning/Reproductive Health, HIV/AIDS, Malaria, Maternal Health, Neglected Tropical Diseases, Non-Communicable Diseases/Injuries, Nutrition, Tuberculosis, Water and Sanitation. Cross-Cutting Issues: Epidemiology, Gender, Health Communication/Healthy Behavior, Health Policy and Advocacy, Health Systems, Human Resources/Training, Knowledge Management, Logistics and Supply Chain Management, Management and Governance, mHealth/eHealth/digital health, Monitoring and Evaluation, Scale Up, Youth.
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