Bangladesh
Community-Based Skilled Birth Attendants in Bangladesh: Attending Deliveries at Home
A program to create a cadre of skilled birth attendants for home births was launched by the Government of Bangladesh Bangladesh in 2004. This article suggests that the task-shifting program can only serve as an interim measure rather than a long-term solution as more women decide to seek institutional delivery and professional midwifery care. [adapted from abstract]
- 4799 reads
Public-Sector Maternal Health Programs and Services for Rural Bangladesh
This paper assesses the development of maternal health services and policies in Bangladesh by reviewing policy and strategy documents since the country's independence in 1971, with primary focus on rural areas where three-fourths of the total population of reside. [adapted from abstract]
- 3000 reads
Training and Mobility of Nurses: the Bangladesh Case
This presentation was part of the Mobility, Training and Supply of Health Workers Worshop. It discusses the state of nurse training and mobility and the policy considerations in Bangladesh.
- 2323 reads
Improving Provider Performance
This article provides an overview of how new research in India and Nigeria offers innovative strategies to improve health care provider performance.
- 2478 reads
Bangladesh Trains Health Workers to Reduce Maternal Mortality
Medical doctors and nurses in Bangladesh are concentrated in urban secondary and tertiary hospitals, while 70% of the population lives in rural areas. This situation has created a major challenge for the national health system, particularly for reducing the high maternal mortality rate, with fewer than 20% of births being attended by a skilled birth attendant. The Declaration of Safe Motherhood was desgined to address this issue, supportetd by a number of national programs and strategies. [from summary]
- 3097 reads
Focusing on the Essentials: Learning for Performance
There is increasing consensus that training programmes should focus on know-how instead of know-all. IntraHealth International’s Learning for performance: a guide and toolkit for health worker training and education programs offers a step-by-step, customizable approach designed to develop the right skills linked to job responsibilities. Using Learning for Performance yields more efficient training that focuses on what is essential for health workers to do their jobs and on effective learning methods.
- 3323 reads
Health Workforce in Bangladesh: Who Constitutes the Healthcare System?
The report aims to document the present health workforce in the country in order to find out their strengths and weaknesses and put forward recommendations for improvement. It lays special emphasis on the profile and density of healthcare providers, quality of services provided by selected groups of providers, training, and production and future challenges for healthcare providers. [adapted from author]
- 6489 reads
Effect of Community-Based Newborn-Care Intervention Package Implemented Through Two Service-Delivery Strategies in Sylhet District, Bangladesh: a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial
Neonatal mortality accounts for a high proportion of deaths in children under the age of 5 years in Bangladesh. This article describes a project for advancing the health of newborns and mothers implementing a community-based intervention package through government and non-government organisation infrastructures to reduce neonatal mortality. [from abstract]
- 4438 reads
Inequity in Maternal Health Care Services: Evidence from Home-Based Skilled Birth Attendant Programmes in Bangladesh
The objective of this research is to explore inequities in utilization of skilled attendance at birth, delivery by caesarean sections and use of postnatal care services, by key socioeconomic factors in two home-based SBA areas of Bangladesh to provide insights for future programming. [from introduction]
- 2998 reads
Comparing Maternal Health Services in Four Countries
While the availability and use of trained midwives can shape the quality of care received in pregnancy and childbirth, a number of other underlying health systems structures and processes are important. The management of health workforces, the mix of public and private provision and the impact of reforms affect quality of care across countries…[This study] examined how the structure and operation of a health system influences maternal health care provision and outcomes in Bangladesh, Russia, South Africa and Uganda. [author’s description]
- 2192 reads
Midwives Assisting Homebirths Face Opposition in Rural Bangladesh
The Centre for Health and Population Research, Dhaka, looked at the experiences of midwives attending homebirths in the rural region of Matlab. In Bangladesh, 91 percent of births still take place at home and only 13 percent are assisted by a doctor or midwife. In 1987, almost 20 years ago, a health initiative was introduced in Matlab to allow midwives to attend women in the home. Researchers conducted interviews and group discussions with 13 midwives in Matlab in 2003 and 2004 to learn what difficulties they faced during their work. [author’s description]
- 2627 reads
Impact of an In-Built Monitoring System on Family Planning Performance in Rural Bangladesh
This article assesses interventions aimed at improving family planning mechanisms and reviewing the problem-solving processes to build an effective monitoring system of the interventions at the local level of the overall system of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare of the Government of Bangladesh. [adapted from author]
- 7354 reads
Health Sector Reforms and Human Resources for Health in Uganda and Bangladesh: Mechanisms of Effect
Despite the expanding literature on how reforms may affect health workers and which reactions they may provoke, little research has been conducted on the mechanisms of effect through which health sector reforms either promote or discourage health worker performance. This paper seeks to trace these mechanisms and examines the contextual framework of reform objectives in Uganda and Bangladesh, and health workers responses to the changes in their working environments by taking a realistic evaluation approach. [abstract]
- 5067 reads
Cost-Effectiveness of Community Health Workers in Tuberculosis Control in Bangladesh
The objective of this article was to compare the cost-effectiveness of the tuberculosis programm run by the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee, which uses community health workers (CHWs), with that of the government program which does not use CHWs. [adapted from author]
- 3667 reads
Costing of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses in Bangladesh: a Study Based on Matlab Data
The purpose of this study is to estimate the cost implications of implementing the newly proposed Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses algorithm in first-level health care facilities in rural areas of Bangladesh. Bangladesh policymakers need to know the cost of IMCI prior to its implementation so that they allocate adequate resources, particularly personnel and drugs, and the associated financial resources to health facilities. [from author]
- 3033 reads
Integrating Vertical Health Programmes into Sector Wide Approaches: Experiences and Lessons
This paper is a desk study which looks at experiences of integrating vertical health programmes into national delivery systems where government and donors have adopted a sector wide approach (SWAp) to supporting health sector reform. It was commissioned to facilitate decision making in SDC regarding future possible integration of the Tanzania Tuberculosis and Leprosy Programme into national delivery systems and the SWAp process.[author’s description]
- 5824 reads
Performance-Based Reimbursement Scheme: a Final Report of a Pilot Study
The NGO Service Delivery Program (NSDP) developed a system ensuring better access of the health services to the poorest segment of the population, along with raising revenue by providing fee-for services to the better off population. The former strategy highlights a safety net policy for the poorest segment, who are identified by participatory rapid appraisal technique and handed out a health benefit card. The latter strategy helps the NGOs to revise their service charges according to local demand and other factors. This report analyzes this pilot effort and its drawbacks and makes recommendations based on lessons learned. [adapted from author]
- 2941 reads
Likely Benefit of Using Workload Indicators of Staffing Need (WISN) for Human Resources Management in the Health Sector of Bangladesh
This study demonstrates how Workload Indicators of Staffing Need (WISN) can be used as a human resources planning and management tool for improving decisions at all levels of health services about the provision, allocation and deployment of staff. [from abstract]
- 7338 reads
Skilled Birth Attendants Accepted at Home Deliveries in Bangladesh
An NSDP survey shows strong support for the use of skilled birth attendants and willingness to pay for their services. Widespread use of SBAs holds much promise in helping to meet the UN Millennium Development goal of reducing the maternal mortality rate to around 140 by 2015. The survey results, which also indicate some barriers to SBA use, have enabled the design of an appropriate pilot intervention. [from introduction]
- 2689 reads
Results from Study of Clinical Staff Turnover Suggest New HR Strategies
The NGOs that comprise the USAID-funded NGO Service Delivery Program must control costs in order to improve their cost recovery rates. Costs associatied with high staff turnover are an important variable operating expense. An NSDP study of staff turnover has produced interesting findings contributing to new staff retention strategies. [introduction]
- 3101 reads
Finding Private-Sector Support for Primary Health Care in Bangladesh
NGOs that provide basic health care to the poor must become less dependent on donor support by diversifying their funding. The NGO Service Delivery Program (NSDP), a USAID-funded health care program in Bangladesh, is working with NGOs to find corporate sponsorship. [publisher’s description]
- 2928 reads
Demographic Implications for Health Human Resources for Bangladesh
This paper is mainly intended to show the demographic implications for Bangladesh’s Health-human resources production in the next two decades as absolute increase in Population is still too high that the economy can cope with. [author’s description]
- 4039 reads
Survey of the Existing Health Workforce of Ministry of Health, Bangladesh
The objective of this study is to present and analyze different issues relating to the existing workforce in the health services of Bangladesh under the Ministry of Health. [from abstract]
- 5670 reads
Dual Job Holding by Public Sector Health Professionals in Highly Resource-Constrained Settings: Problem or Solution?
This paper examines the policy options for the regulation of dual job holding by medical professionals in highly resource-constrained settings. It draws on the limited evidence available on this topic to assess a number of regulatory options in relation to the objectives of quality of care and access to services, as well as some of the policy constraints that can undermine implementation in resource-poor settings. [from abstract]
- 5902 reads
Implementing IMCI in a Developing Country: Estimating the Need for Additional Health Workers in Bangladesh
This study estimates the personnel cost implications of implementing the newly proposed Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) algorithm in the first level health care facilities in rural Bangladesh. Policy makers need to know the additional resource requirements for IMCI before its actual implementation so that appropriate levels and combinations of personnel and drugs can be allocated. [abstract]
- 2646 reads
Multiple Public-Private Jobholding of Health Care Providers in Developing Countries: An Exploration of Theory and Evidence
This review examines the systemic and individual causes of multiple job holding (MJH) and evidence on its prevalence. MJH should be seen as resulting initially from underlying system-related causes. These include overly ambitious efforts by governments to develop and staff extensive delivery systems with insufficient resources. Governments have tried to use a combination of low wages, incentives, exhortations to public service, and regulation to develop these systems.
- 3738 reads
Impact of Management Training on Family Planning and Health Services Performance in Rural Bangladesh
This study assessed the impact of management training in the performance of managers from agencies in Bangladesh delivering primary healthcare services. [from abstract]
- 1953 reads
Appraisal of the Institutional Training Arrangement for Community Health Workers in Bangladesh
This research sheds light on the nature, design and provision of institutional services for providing training to the premier community health service providers in the public sector in Bangladesh. Virtually no major study exists on the training of the FWVs in the country. The methodology of the research mainly consists of a personal interview and questionnaire survey, covering the concerned trainers and officials of the major public health administration and training institutions of the country, including the National Institute of Population Research and Training, the Family Planning Directorate and the Family Welfare Visitors’ Training Institute.
- 2975 reads
Ghost Doctors: Absenteeism in Bangladeshi Health Facilities
The authors report on a study in which unannounced visits were made to health clinics in Bangladesh with the intention of discovering what fraction of medical professionals were present at their assigned post. This survey represents the first attempt to quantify the extent of the problem on a nationally representative scale. [from abstract]
- 6189 reads