The Ghana Community-based Health Planning and Services initiative: fostering evidence-based organizational change and development in a resource-constrained setting.

Research projects throughout the developing world often demonstrate ways to improve health services. Yet scientific evidence often has little bearing on what large scale national health programs actually do. An approach to evidence-based policy development has been launched in Ghana which bridges the gap between research findings and programme implementation. Guided by open systems organizational theory the Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) initiative employs a successful experimental study as a model for national health systems reform and implements a national strategy for fostering the diffusion of innovation and planned operational change. Over a two year period 71 districts out of the 110 districts in Ghana have started the CHPS programme suggesting that CHPS has fostered the rapid diffusion of organizational change. This paper reviews features of the CHPS initiative that build experience from community research and disseminate lessons learned through a programme of dissemination and exchange. CHPS demonstrates ways to mobilize volunteerism local resources and cultural institutions that would not otherwise be resources for primary health care. The CHPS approach thereby represents a paradigm for health care development that may be generally relevant to resource constrained health ministries elsewhere in Africa. Nonetheless limitations of the programme have detracted from its full potential. These problems and their policy implications are reviewed and discussed. (author’s)

[1]  C. Lloyd,et al.  The Effect of Gender Differences in Primary School Access, Type, and Quality on the Decision to Enroll in Rural Pakistan , 2005, Economic Development and Cultural Change.

[2]  Paul C. Hewett,et al.  The Feasibility of Computer-Assisted Survey Interviewing in Africa , 2004 .

[3]  Z. Zimmer,et al.  How Indicators of Socioeconomic Status Relate to Physical Functioning of Older Adults in Three Asian Societies , 2004 .

[4]  J. Bongaarts Completing the fertility transition in the developing world: The role of educational differences and fertility preferences , 2003, Population studies.

[5]  G. Feeney,et al.  INAUGURAL ARTICLE by a Recently Elected Academy Member:Estimating mean lifetime , 2003 .

[6]  E. Rogers,et al.  Diffusion of innovations , 1964, Encyclopedia of Sport Management.

[7]  J. Bongaarts The End of the Fertility Transition in the Developed World , 2002 .

[8]  Elizabeth F. Jackson,et al.  The impact of the Navrongo Project on contraceptive knowledge and use, reproductive preferences, and fertility. , 2002, Studies in family planning.

[9]  R. Simmons,et al.  Facilitating large-scale transitions to quality of care: an idea whose time has come. , 2002, Studies in family planning.

[10]  J. Casterline,et al.  Obstacles to contraceptive use in Pakistan: a study in Punjab. , 2001, Studies in family planning.

[11]  J. Satia,et al.  The strategic approach to contraceptive introduction. , 1997, Studies in family planning.

[12]  P Howden-Chapman,et al.  Translating research findings into health policy. , 1996, Social science & medicine.

[13]  F. Binka,et al.  Developing a culturally appropriate family planning program for the Navrongo experiment. , 1995, Studies in family planning.

[14]  F. Binka,et al.  The Navrongo Community Health and Family Planning Project. , 1995, Studies in family planning.

[15]  J. Phillips Translating pilot project success into national policy development: two projects in Bangladesh. , 1987, Asia-Pacific population journal.

[16]  M. Yunus,et al.  Transferring health and family planning service innovations to the public sector: an experiment in organization development in Bangladesh. , 1984, Studies in family planning.

[17]  D. Korten Community Organization and Rural Development : A Learning Process Approach , 1980 .

[18]  F. Glen The social psychology of organizations , 1976 .

[19]  E. Glaser,et al.  Factors influencing the success of applied research. , 1973 .

[20]  Z. Zimmer,et al.  The living arrangements of older adults in sub-Saharan Africa in a time of HIV/AIDS , 2003 .

[21]  P. Hewett,et al.  Primary schooling in sub-Saharan Africa: Recent trends and current challenges , 2003 .

[22]  J. Casterline,et al.  Condom use and abstinence among unmarried young people in Zimbabwe: which strategy whose agenda? , 2003 .

[23]  P. Demeny Population policy: A concise summary , 2003 .

[24]  Geoffrey McNicoll,et al.  Population and development: An introductory view , 2003 .

[25]  S. Amin,et al.  Wage work and marriage: perspectives of Egyptian working women. , 2003 .

[26]  Elizabeth F. Jackson,et al.  Women's denial of having experienced female genital cutting in northern Ghana: Explanatory factors and consequences for analysis of survey data , 2003 .

[27]  J. Phillips,et al.  Evidence-based development of health and family planning programs in Bangladesh and Ghana. , 2003 .

[28]  Z. Zimmer,et al.  Changes in functional limitations and survival among the elderly in Taiwan: 1993 1996 and 1999. , 2002 .

[29]  Julian May,et al.  Adolescent Sexual Behavior , 2022 .

[30]  J. Casterline,et al.  Social organization and reproductive behavior in southern Ghana. , 2002 .

[31]  B. Mensch,et al.  Premarital sex in Vietnam: Is the current concern with adolescent reproductive health warranted? , 2002 .

[32]  G. Mcnicoll Demographic Factors in East Asian Regional Integration , 2002 .

[33]  M. Ruel,et al.  Childcare, Mothers' Work, and Earnings: Findings from the Urban Slums of Guatemala City , 2002 .

[34]  C. Kaufman,et al.  Bus fare please: the economics of sex and gifts among adolescents in urban South Africa. , 2002 .

[35]  K. MacIntyre,et al.  Pregnant or Positive: Adolescent Childbearing and HIV Risk in South Africa , 2002 .

[36]  M. Ainsworth,et al.  The elderly and AIDS: Coping strategies and health consequences in rural Tanzania , 2002 .

[37]  Z. Zimmer,et al.  Living Arrangements of Older Adults in the Developing World: An Analysis of DHS Household Surveys , 2001 .

[38]  M. Ezra Ecological degradation, rural poverty, and migration in Ethiopia: A contextual analysis , 2001 .

[39]  P. Nyarko,et al.  Immunization status and child survival in rural Ghana , 2001 .

[40]  Z. Zimmer,et al.  Living arrangements and socio-demographic conditions of older adults in Cambodia , 2001, Journal of cross-cultural gerontology.

[41]  Z. Zimmer,et al.  Whose Education Counts? The Impact of Grown Children's Education on the Physical Functioning of Their Parents in Taiwan , 2001 .

[42]  C. Lloyd,et al.  Determinants of educational attainment among adolescents in Egypt: Does school quality make a difference? , 2001 .

[43]  P. Hewett,et al.  Social networks and contraceptive dynamics in southern Ghana. , 2001 .

[44]  P. Nyarko,et al.  The Impact of the Navrongo Community Health and Family Planning Project on Child Mortality, 1993-2000 , 2000 .

[45]  A. Creese,et al.  Disease eradication and health systems development. , 1998, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[46]  M. Mintrom,et al.  Policy entrepreneurs and the diffusion of innovation , 1997 .

[47]  J. Bongaarts Household size and composition in the developing world , 1996 .

[48]  D. Levy-bruhl,et al.  The Bamako Initiative: primary health care experiencecontinued. , 1990 .

[49]  Edward Maynard Glaser,et al.  Putting knowledge to use : facilitating the diffusion of knowledge and the implementation of planned change , 1983 .

[50]  E. Rogers Diffusion of Innovations, Fourth Edition , 1982 .