Capacity issues in primary health care implementation: examples from Ghana
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Health Education
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose – Resources as well as the capacity to employ them judiciously may well be the key to the attainment
of the SDGs and other related health goals through primary health care (PHC). Within this PHC framework,
however, the source of resources for PHC as well as the systems for managing these associated resources
remain unclear, complex and lack substantive integration systems of implementing ministries, departments
and agencies (both local and international) in Ghana. These issues are addressed by this study.
Design/methodology/approach – The framework approach to thematic analysis was used to analyse
qualitative data collected from key PHC managers in Ghana selected purposively from the national, regional
and district levels. Data were collected through in-depth interviews specially designed in line with the study
objectives. The study was also governed by the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research which
provided ethical clearance for the study.
Findings – As per Alma Ata’s recommendation, PHC in its purest form is a resource dense activity with farreaching
implications on individuals and communities. Without adequate resources, PHC implementation
remained merely on paper. Findings show that the key capacities required for PHC implementation were finance,
human resource, technology and logistics. While significant cases of shortages and inadequacies were evident,
management and maintenance of these capacities appeared to be another significant determinant of PHC
implementation. Additionally, the poor allocation, distribution and sustainability of these capacities had a
negative effect on PHC outcomes with more resources being concentrated in capital towns than in rural areas.
Research limitations/implications – This study has significant implications on the way PHC is seen,
implemented and assessed not in Ghana but in other developing countries. In addition to examining the nature
and extent of capacities required for PHC implementation, it gives significant pathways on how limited
resources, when properly managed, may catalyse the attainment of the PHC goals. Subsequently, PHC
implementation will profit from stakeholder attention and further research into practical ways of ensuring
efficiency in the allocation, distribution and management of resources especially considering the limited
resources available and the budding constraints associated with the dependency on external stakeholders for
PHC implementation.
Originality/value – This study is part of a series on PHC implementation in Ghana. Quite apart from putting
core implementation issues into perspective, it presents first-hand information on Ghana’s PHC implementation
journey and is thus relevant for researchers, students, practitioners and the wider public.
Keywords Developing countries, Community based interventions, Primary health care
Paper type Research paper
Description
Research Article
