Å·ÃÀÈÕb´óƬ

Skip to Main Navigation
Events

Financing Primary Health Care: Opportunities at the Boundaries

June 14-16, 2022

Preston Auditorium, World Bank Main Complex, Washington DC and virtual

Health Refinancing Forum

Å·ÃÀÈÕb´óƬ, USAID and the Global Financing Facility, with the support of GIZ, will host the 6th Annual Health Financing Forum (AHFF) on June 14 to 16, 2022. This year's AHFF will focus on approaches to mobilizing and pooling funds to pay for primary health care (PHC).

Despite more than 50 years of global attention to PHC, including efforts over the past ten years working towards universal health coverage (UHC) with essential services and financial protection, the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic has revealed how health systems in many low- and middle-income countries remain focused on delivering secondary and tertiary care. Frequently, only limited health services and medicines are available at the first point of contact, often of poor quality and requiring considerable out-of-pocket costs. The result is that many people choose to bypass this care altogether. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, countries may also have invested more in tertiary care with the sudden need for increased intensive care to the detriment of PHC.

Since 2016, the Annual Health Financing Forum (AHFF) has been one of the few global spaces to convene key actors from the health and financing sectors to discuss pressing health financing concerns. Previous AHFFs have addressed some of the financing issues that are critical for PHC from a systems perspective.

This year, the forum will be hosted in Washington, DC and online. Six plenary sessions will explore opportunities at the boundaries, that is, areas where the way forward remains controversial or unclear.  The Forum will build on the work of the recently released Lancet Commission on Financing Primary Health Care: Putting people at the Centre.  

Please see the . 

.

  • This year¡¯s AHFF will take place via a hybrid format, with participants having the option to attend the plenary sessions in person at the World Bank¡¯s Preston Auditorium, in Washington, DC, or to follow via livestream.   

    The 6th AHFF will consist of six plenary sessions, including an introductory session to set the stage and the Adam Wagstaff Memorial Lecture. The Forum¡¯s plenary sessions will be held in Washington, DC, at the World Bank¡¯s Preston Auditorium. Plenaries will start at 8:00 am Eastern Standard Time, and they will be livestreamed through the AHFF online platform. 

    The plenary sessions will be complemented with seven additional deep-dive sessions on related topics. 

    Given COVID-19 protocols, the Washington venue will have a capacity of 125 people, prioritizing the participation of policymakers from low-income or lower-middle-income countries.

    Adam Wagstaff Memorial Lecture Session

    Since 2020, the AHFF has held Adam Wagstaff Memorial Lecture, to commemorate the influential work of Adam in the area of health economics and financing. The lecture will focus on Adam¡¯s recent work on measuring progress towards universal health coverage.?Adam Wagstaff was Research Manager in the Development Research Group (Human Development) from 2009 until his passing in May 2020.

    During this year¡¯s session, chaired by Juan Pablo Uribe, Global Director of the Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice, awardees of the Adam Wagstaff Award (AWA) for Outstanding Research on the Economics of Healthcare Financing and Delivery in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, established by IHEA, will be invited to participate. Winners for the AWA 2020 are Giancarlo Buitrago and Radhika Jain.

    Read more about Adam Wagstaff here

  • June 13th

    8:00 ¨C 9:30 EST : Side Event 1¡ª

    Recording: |

    Speakers: 

    • Ajay Tandon, Lead Economist, World Bank
    • Patrick Eozenou, Senior Economist, World Bank 
    • Tamar Gabunia, First Deputy Minister, Ministry of Internally Displaced People from the Occupied Territories, Labor, Health and Social Affairs, Georgia 
    • Gabriela Flores, World Health Organization 
    • Shabnum Sarfaraz, Member Social Sector & Development at the Planning Commission, Government of Pakistan
    • Amala de Silva, Professor, University of Colombo 

    Universal Health Coverage (Sustainable Development Goal 3.8) requires not only access to essential health services for all but also financial protection ¨C that no one experiences financial hardship when using the healthcare they need. While health service coverage was improving steadily prior to COVID-19, financial hardship from out-of-pocket medical spending remained pervasive. The pandemic affects financial protection through a variety of channels like reductions in household and public incomes, new health spending needs, and increased forgoing of care. This session explores these channels conceptually and empirically: After a brief introduction to financial protection indicators, the session will present global and regional trends in financial protection prior to COVID-19 and use new data and analysis to assess the pandemic¡¯s impacts on out-of-pocket spending and the forgoing of care for financial reasons. Subsequently, panelists will provide perspectives on policies to improve financial protection during the pandemic and beyond.

  • June 14th

    08:00-08.30 EST : Opening Remarks 

    08.30-09.30 EST :

    Recording:  | 

    Speakers: 

    • Kara Hanson, Professor, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
    • Joe Kutzin, Head of Health Financing Unit, World Health Organization 
    • Christoph Kurowski, Global Lead of Health Financing Global Solutions Group, World Bank 

    This is an introductory session led by Kara Hanson, Chair of the Lancet Global Health Commission and Christoph Kurowski, Global Lead of the Health Financing Global Solutions Group, World Bank

    09:30-10.30 EST : Coffee Break 

    10.30-11.30 EST EST : Plenary Session2 - Funding PHC in the time of COVID-19.

    Recording:  | 

    Meeting docs:  |

    Speakers: 

    • David Evans, World Bank  
    • Iryna Postolovska, Senior Health Economist, World Bank
    • Mai Farid, Assistant Minister of Finance, Egyptian Ministry of Finance
    • Mariana Mazzucato, Chair of the WHO Council/Professor in the Economics of Innovation and Public Value/Founding Director on the Economics of Health for All/University College London /UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose.
    • Ousmane Diaby, Director of Study and Projects, Ministry of Public Health, Cameroon 
    • Ben Akabueze, Director General, Budget Office of the Federation, Nigeria
    • Nick Carroll, Technical Assistance Advisor, International Monetary Fund 
    • Katie Malouf Bous, Senior Policy Advisor ¨C Public Services | Oxfam International

    This session will present the most recent data on health spending, showing the growing rifts across countries in their capacity to invest in health. The discussion will also focus on policies that can result in greater funding for PHC, including such exploring questions as: Should countries be able to borrow more to increase government spending? Could countries enforce a minimum 20% tax on companies without encouraging international companies to relocate? In countries where health is now less of a priority, how should the relationship between Ministries of Health and Finance be reconsidered? Do the health sector and donor financing communities have any quick wins that could effectively drive more resources to PHC?

    11.30-13.00 : Lunch  

    11:45-12:45 : [Lunch event by invitation only] Africa Regional Partners Meeting

    13:00-14:30 : Side Event -2 -

    Recording:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Ellen Van de Poel, Health Financing Lead, World Bank 
    • Eeshani Kandpal, Senior Economist, World Bank 
    • Hamis Colquhoun, Health Financing Consultant, World Bank 
    • Dr. Stephen Banda, Director of Policy, Planning and Health Economics, Ministry of Health and Child Care, Zimbabwe 
    • Dr. Oritseweymimi Ogbe, National Primary Health Care Development Agency, Nigeria  
    • Thiane Gueye, Coordinator of the Health Economics Unit and President of the Women¡¯s Association, Ministry of Health and Social Action, Senegal

    Improving purchasing of PHC has long been a policy priority across LMICs. With support from donors, many countries have been experimenting with PBF as a mechanism to get more results from the available financing. A vast body of evidence around the impact of such schemes shows that indeed flexible financing and accountability at the lower levels of the health system are important to drive up utilization, but also questions the need for the fee-for-service mechanism and highlights issues of sustainability. Public financial management systems often do not easily allow for more output-based financing of PHC services, which creates challenges for integrating the key aspects of PBF schemes into the government system. At the same time, the capacity and experience generated through PBF schemes offer an opportunity to push forward the necessary reforms to move towards a more integrated strategic purchasing of PHC services. 

    This session will lay out the evidence base around PBF, the challenges and opportunities it creates for moving towards more integrated financing, and illustrate how key components of PBF can be integrated into government systems. 

    14:30-15.00 EST : Coffee Break 

    15:00-16:30 EST : Side Event 3¡ª

    Recording:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Kara Hanson, Professor, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine  
    • Cheryl Cashin, Managing Director, Results for Development  
    • Prof. Edwine Barasa, Director, Nairobi Programme, & Head, Health Economics Research Unit (HERU), KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kenya  
    • Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez-Pier, Senior Technical Director Health Financing HP + Program, Palladium Global Group, Mexico  
    • Carla Lopez Castaneda, Director Health Financing, Last Mille Head, USA 
    • Linda Vanoto, Country Director of Accelerator Ghana, Results for Development 

    Increasing expenditure on PHC starts with allocating more resources to PHC, and then protecting these resources so they reach frontline providers.  Resource allocation processes take different forms in different systems, depending on whether budgeting processes are centralized or decentralized.  But in all systems there are pressures for resources to drift upwards and away from PHC.  Three sets of policy tools are available to direct resources to PHC ¨C budget formulation, budget execution (including provider payment) and service design.  This session will explore countries¡¯ experience of using these different policy levers and the system capabilities need to deploy them effectively.  The session will begin by outlining the challenge of increasing budget allocations for PHC.  The three sets of policy tools will be presented, together with some evidence of how they have operated in different settings.  Panelists will be invited to reflect on how these tools have been deployed in their countries, with a focus on identifying the challenges to implementing them and how they have strengthened health systems and PFM capacity to enable redirecting resources towards PHC. 

  • June 15th

    8:00-9:30 EST : Plenary Session 3 - 

    Recording:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Tim Williamson, Senior Governance and Public Sector Specialist, World Bank 
    • Moritz Piatti, Senior Economist, World Bank 
    • Dr. Sarah Byakika, Commissioner Planning, Financing and Policy, Ministry of Health, Uganda 
    • Associate Prof. Pichenda Koeut, Director of Payment Certification Agency, Cambodia  
    • Prof.Edwine Barasa, Director, Nairobi Programme, & Head, Health Economics Research Unit (HERU), KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kenya  
    • Mark Blecher, Chief Director, South African National Treasury 

    This session will present and debate practical steps on how to transition toward blended and consolidated provider payment frameworks for PHC in various Public Financial Management (PFM) settings. The session will address questions of balancing flexibility and controls in expenditure management, enhancing provider autonomy, developing public finance capacity, including the role of ICT, and the consolidation of funds flows towards a strategic orientation of PHC payment frameworks.  

    09.30¨C10.00 EST : Coffee Break 

    10:00¨C11:30 EST : Plenary Session 4-Paying for Essential Medicines for PHC

    Recording:  |

    Meeting docs:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Dr. Tessa Edejer, Acting Director of Health Systems Governance and Financing, World Health Organization   
    • Lombe Kasonde, Senior Health Specialist, World Bank   
    • Anna Fenchak, Deputy Head of National Health Service, Ukraine 
    • Dr. Lydia Dsane-Selby, Former Chief Executive, National Health Insurance Authority, Ghana  
    • Lily Kresnowati, Director of Health Service Assurance, Indonesian Agency of Social Security Administrator on Health Program (BPJS Kesehatan), Indonesia  
    • Dr. Firass Abbiad, Minister of Public Health, Lebanon  
    • Dr. Dominique Baabo Kubuya, National Coordinator of PDSS Health Systems Strengthening Project, Ministry of Health, Democratic Republic of Congo

    This session will explore the available evidence on medicine expenditures as part of PHC across countries, drawing on the Lancet Commission¡¯s work, as well as the impact of medicine purchases on financial catastrophe and impoverishment. The discussion will also consider strategies to reduce either the need for people to pay for medicines as part of their first-line treatment or the cost of these medicines (price and volume). It will also examine possible improvements in the supply chain along with debates about some of the WHO Council on the Economics of Health for All¡¯s more controversial recommendations designed to increase the availability and the cost of new technologies in lower-income settings.

    11.30-13.00 : Lunch 

    11:45¨C12:45 : Lunch event:

    Recording:

    Speakers:

    • Somil Nagpal, Senior Health Specialist, World Bank 
    • Lily Kresnowati, Director of Health Service Assurance, Indonesian Agency of Social Security Administrator on Health Program (BPJS Kesehatan), Indonesia  
    • Mahlil Ruby, Director of Planning, Development and Risk Management, Indonesian Agency of Social Security Administrator on Health Program (BPJS Kesehatan), Indonesia  
    • Daniel Dulitzky, Regional Director for Human Development-East Asia, World Bank 
    • Christoph Kurowski, Global Lead of Health Financing Global Solutions Group, World Bank

    13:00¨C14:30 EST : Side Event 4 ¡ª

    Recording:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Dr.Tessa Edejer, Acting Director of Health Systems Governance and Financing, World Health Organization   
    • Professor Alex Voorhoeve, Head of Department and Professor in Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method, London School of Economics and Political Science 
    • Dr. Lydia Dsane-Selby, Former Chief Executive, National Health Insurance Authority, Ghana  
    • Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez-Pier, Senior Technical Director Health Financing HP + Program, Palladium Global Group, Mexico  
    • Oyebanji Filani, Commissioner, Ministry of Health, Nigeria   
    • Dr. John Kinuthia, Senior Program Officer, International Budget Partnership Kenya  
    • Ingvar Theo Olsen, Global Health Lead, Norad, Norway

    Primary care is the foundation of resilient, equitable, and high-performing health systems. The recent Lancet Global Health Commission on financing PHC underscored the importance of people-centered PHC while highlighting PHC to be consistently under-resourced. Decision-making processes about prioritizing and financing PHC need systematic investment.  Frequently, people lack a voice in shaping these decisions. Moreover, critical decisions in health financing, such as allocation of resources between various types of services (primary care vs high technology interventions) or decisions modifying user fees or provider payment methods, are often made through opaque processes with weak evidence base. At worst, this contributes to inequitable decisions driven by self-interest of those in power. However, even when decisions taken through such secretive processes are well intended and are in line with good practices, it is likely that they will meet with resistance and non-compliance.

    Building on the work led by the World Bank and presented in the Third Annual Universal Health Coverage Financing Forum (2018), the session presents a new report Fairness on the Path to UHC: Durability and Trust in Health Financing Decisions (working title).

    14:30¨C15.00 EST : Coffee Break 

    15:00¨C16:30 EST : Side Event 5 ¡ª

    Recording:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Dina Balabanova, Professor, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine  
    • Susan Sparkes, Health Economist, World Health Organization 
    • Nouria Brikci, Research Fellow in Health Economics, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine  
    • Triin Habicht, Senior Health Economist, World Health Organization   
    • Dr. Wangari Ng¡¯ang¡¯a, Senior Health Advisor, Presidential Policy and Strategy Unit, Executive Office of the President, Republic of Kenya   
    • Rozita Halina Binti Tun Hussein, Director of Planning Division, Ministry of Health, Malaysia 
    • Esther Dweck, Professor, Federal University of RIo de Janeiro, Brazil 
    • Alison Mhazo, Technical Advisor, Ministry of Health, Malawi

    Effective and equitable financing of PHC requires explicitly considering the constantly evolving social, political, and economic conditions in a context - or the political economy of a country, in conjunction with technical factors. Political economy analysis includes three interdependent domains: the politics, the social conditions, and the economy of a country. In this session, we will look at each domain in turn, and discuss how engaging with these can support effective and equitable PHC financing and its successful reforms.  

    17:30-19:30 : AHFF Reception

  • June 16th

    8:00-9:30 EST:

    Recording:  |

    Speaker:

    • Prof. Justice Nonvignon, Head, Health Economics Programme, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Ghana
    • Juan Pablo Uribe, Global Director of the Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice  
    • Owen O'donnell, Professor, Erasmus University Rotterdam 
    • Mario Vera-Fernandez, Professor of Economics, University College London 
    • Radhika Jain, Lecture in Health Economics, University College London

    Since 2020 the AHFF has held the Adam Wagstaff Memorial Lecture in honor of Adam Wagstaff, research manager at the World Bank, professor of economics, mentor, and associate editor of the Journal of Health Economics. During this year¡¯s session, chaired by Juan Pablo Uribe, Global Director of the Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice, awardees of the Adam Wagstaff Award (AWA) for Outstanding Research on the Economics of Healthcare Financing and Delivery in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, established by IHEA, will be invited to participate. Winners for the AWA 2020 are Giancarlo Buitrago and Radhika Jain.

    10:00¨C11:30 EST : Plenary Session 5- Financing Comprehensive PHC and Q&A

    Recording:  |

    Meeting docs:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Ahmed Elsobky, Deputy Minister of Health and Population and Chairman, General Authority of Healthcare (GAHC), Egypt
    • Christoph Kurowski, Global Lead of Health Financing Global Solutions Group, World Bank 
    • Oyebanji Filani, Commissioner, Ministry of Health, Nigeria   
    • Dr. Mahlil Ruby, Director of Planning, Development and Risk Management, Indonesian Agency of Social Security Administrator on Health Program (BPJS Kesehatan), Indonesia  
    • Tamar Gabunia, First Deputy Minister, Ministry of Internally Displaced People from the Occupied Territories, Labor, Health and Social Affairs, Georgia   
    • Carolina Casullo, National Director of Health Systems Strengthening at the Ministry of Health, Argentina  
    • Dr. Liisa-Maria Voipio-Pulkki, Chief Medical Officer and Senior Adviser in the Permanent Secretary¡¯s Cabinet at the Finish Ministry of Social Affairs and Health, Finland

    Drawing on a first set of case studies, this session will highlight the scope, trade-offs, and priorities among comprehensive PHC activities from a bottom-up health system perspective as well as identify the local organizations and institutions responsible for their delivery. The session will also examine the financing and financing arrangements in different contexts for these activities and organizations and look at how these can be strengthened to attain a well-functioning, comprehensive PHC. 

    11:30¨C13:00 EST : Lunch 

    11:45¨C12:45 EST : Lunch event :

    Recording:

    Speakers:

    • Kent Ranson, Senior Economist, Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice, World Bank, Switzerland 
    • Lizna Makhani, Manager, Gavi, Switzerland 
    • Sarah Alkenbrack, Senior Health Economist, Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice, World Bank, USA 
    • Ulla Griffith, Senior Advisor in Health Economics, UNICEF, USA 
    • Prof. Justice Nonvignon, Head, Health Economics Programme, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Ghana
    • Helen Saxenian, Senior Fellow, Results for Development 
    • Dr.Meerjady Sabrina Flora, Additional Director General, Directorate of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Bangladesh

    13:00¨C14:30 EST :

    Recording:  |

    Speakers:

    • Toomas Palu, Advisor, World Bank 
    • Dr. Evan Blecher, Economist, World Bank   
    • Mai Farid, Assistant Minister of Finance for Economic Justice Board Advisor for the Universal Health Insurance Authority, Egyptian Ministry of Finance  
    • Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez-Pier, Senior Technical Director Health Financing HP + Program, Palladium Global Group, Mexico  
    • Dr. Tessa Edejer, Acting Director of Health Systems Governance and Financing, World Health Organization   
    • Adanna Chukwuma, Senior Health Economist, World Bank 
    • Ceren Ozer, Senior Economist, Domestic Resource Mobilization Unit, World Bank  
    • Alan Fuchs, Senior Economist, Poverty and Equity Global Practice, World Bank

    About 50 LMICs will not recover economically to pre-pandemic levels before 2026 putting at risk governments¡¯ ability to finance essential expenditures, including health.  Public debt globally is expected to be 11% of GDP higher compared to pre-pandemic levels requiring larger set-asides for debt servicing further constraining effective fiscal space.   This is all in the context of countries still responding to a pandemic, having to invest in strengthening health systems for resilience and preparedness, and recover lost gains in making progress towards SDG3 and UHC.  Stepping up and spending 1% more of GDP on PHC as called on by UHC GMRs will be difficult. This session will explore the feasibility of health taxes on tobacco, alcohol, and SSBs as an option to simultaneously expand governments¡¯ fiscal space and improve health outcomes. Expanding fiscal space includes increasing tax revenues and reducing expenditures related to tobacco, alcohol, and SSB use (e.g., healthcare, public safety, etc.). Earmarking of revenues for health may be viable in some jurisdictions and may also be important to increase political viability and/or public acceptability. 

    15:00 ¨C 16:30 EST : Side Event 7¡ª

    Recording:  |

    Speakers: 

    • Prof. Justice Nonvignon, Head, Health Economics Programme, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Ghana  
    • Oludare Bodunrin, Acting Director-of Strategic Purchasing Africa Resource Centre, Amref Health Africa, Kenya  
    • Associate Prof. John Ataguba, Executive Director, Africa Health Economics Association (AfHEA)   
    • Eva Pascoal, Health Systems Advisor, World Health Organization 
    • Matiko Riro, Regional Technical Advisor, Health Financing, Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) 

    The skills and human resources required to perform health financing and health systems functions are growing more and more complex. In some areas and countries, approaches to strengthening capacity and training remain heavily reliant on external funding and expertise and have not been sufficiently sustainable and grounded in locally-defined needs and resources. There is a need for a robust understanding of the skills gap, career paths, and appropriate educational, training, and mentorship models to fill these gaps. Filling gaps means not only producing more expertise in diverse areas from health economics to management to data science but addressing gender equity in key areas.

    This session will be a roundtable discussion including invited participants, primarily Africa-based academic, government, and regional organizations, to explore the challenges and potential solutions to strengthen country-level and regional capacity in a sustainable way by creating an alliance of regional actors.

  • June 17th

    *These sessions are by invitation only

    9:00-11:00 EST : Development Partners Session 1

    This workshop for partners, donors, and other key stakeholders will focus on furthering collaboration and coordination around the PHC financing agenda. In particular, this in-person event will bring together members from GAP, the Sustainable Finance for Health and the PHC accelerators and policymakers.

    11:30¨C13:00 EST : Development Partners Session 2

    Case studies from Pakistan and Nigeria