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.
09.30–10.00 EST : Coffee Break
10:00–11:30 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
11:45–12:45 : 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
13:00–14:30 EST : Side Event 4 —
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).
14:30–15.00 EST : Coffee Break
15:00–16:30 EST : Side Event 5 —
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