00:00:03
[Music]
00:00:11
Ethiopia is one of the oldest sites of
00:00:13
human existence known to
00:00:15
scientists over the generations many
00:00:18
different factors have played a
00:00:19
significant role in its
00:00:21
formation today Ethiopia is Africa's
00:00:25
second most populous country with over
00:00:27
80 million people 84% % of them living
00:00:30
in remote rural
00:00:32
areas and despite its Rich history and
00:00:35
the stoic determination of its people
00:00:38
it's still one of the most
00:00:39
underdeveloped countries in the world
00:00:41
but with the fastest growing
00:00:43
economy the last two decades have
00:00:46
witnessed some significant changes
00:00:48
particularly in maternal and child
00:00:51
health 20 years ago the maternal
00:00:53
mortality rate was uh very high more
00:00:56
than 1,000 per 100,000 life birges and
00:01:00
under five mortality was also very high
00:01:03
and above the subsaharan uh Count's
00:01:07
average actually but now the two
00:01:09
indicators are much better and even
00:01:12
below the subsaharan
00:01:15
average importantly these gains have
00:01:17
been seen in all parts of Ethiopia due
00:01:20
in no small part to a strong political
00:01:23
will you know the health sector was the
00:01:25
most ignored sector in the two previous
00:01:31
governments but uh since the new
00:01:33
government the prdf that government got
00:01:35
formed in
00:01:37
1991 he has become a central program of
00:01:41
the government you know what you can see
00:01:43
that in the last 20 years you know with
00:01:47
that political will very ingenious and
00:01:51
Innovative programs were developed on
00:01:53
the basis of the understanding of the
00:01:55
reality of the country the context of
00:01:57
the country so the differences we have
00:02:00
invested the past 20 years in Primary
00:02:02
Health Care which is key in really
00:02:05
taking Health Services to the Grassroots
00:02:08
to the
00:02:09
communities this focus on primary
00:02:11
healthc care has led to some remarkable
00:02:13
gains over 90% of the population now has
00:02:17
access to Primary
00:02:18
Healthcare in 2011 one government-run
00:02:22
Primary Health Center served 29,000
00:02:25
people down from 105,000 in 2007
00:02:30
the number of outpatient Department
00:02:31
visits has increased correspondingly and
00:02:34
there has been a considerable increase
00:02:35
in immunization
00:02:37
rates but how has Ethiopia achieved this
00:02:41
progress this was one of the key
00:02:43
questions asked in the good health at
00:02:45
lowcost book edited by London School of
00:02:48
hygiene and tropical medicine and funded
00:02:50
by the Rockefeller
00:02:51
Foundation we find that countries that
00:02:54
have pursued continuously particular
00:02:56
Health policies tend to be more
00:02:59
successful and um it is important to
00:03:03
also ensure that these policies respond
00:03:05
to the needs of the population so
00:03:08
sometimes ndgs or internationally agreed
00:03:10
targets are not the best thing for one
00:03:12
particular country we have to think
00:03:14
about
00:03:16
context from the early 1990s the
00:03:19
Ethiopian government recognized the key
00:03:21
role that must be played by Health
00:03:23
Improvement in the country's economic
00:03:26
development at the heart of their
00:03:28
strategy lay intersector moral action
00:03:30
linking Health to progress in other
00:03:33
sectors Health has to be embedded in a
00:03:35
bigger agenda to improve development so
00:03:37
while it's vital to improve health
00:03:39
outcomes you also have to look at
00:03:40
educating your women making sure
00:03:43
agricultural development's concentrated
00:03:44
on and the importance of water and
00:03:47
sanitation so health is one component
00:03:49
orbe it vital in a bigger picture the
00:03:52
foundation of the intersectoral action
00:03:54
was the government's drive towards
00:03:57
decentralization and determined efforts
00:03:59
to promote Community participation in
00:04:02
development at the community level I
00:04:04
think there's this historic uh example
00:04:06
that even when it was more of a
00:04:07
socialist country that you had
00:04:10
committees at this level that were very
00:04:12
proactive in shaping how the community
00:04:15
operated so there's already those tiers
00:04:18
or those systems or those structures in
00:04:20
place whereby you are part of something
00:04:22
bigger than just yourself your household
00:04:24
you feed to your community which then
00:04:26
feeds up and further and further up
00:04:28
Community ownership is the
00:04:30
central part of our not only health
00:04:33
systems or the health sector but for our
00:04:36
government and we try to ensure
00:04:38
Community ownership in order to have
00:04:41
really good impact we try to increase
00:04:44
the awareness of the communities and try
00:04:47
to understand the behavior religious or
00:04:49
cultural beliefs and try to address
00:04:52
those uh behaviors and mobilize
00:04:55
communities around a goal that uh we
00:04:58
want to achieve
00:05:00
in terms of health the greatest
00:05:02
manifestation of community ownership in
00:05:04
Ethiopia is the health extension program
00:05:07
which was designed with input from Key
00:05:09
stakeholders in the environment water
00:05:12
and
00:05:15
education the health extension program
00:05:17
is an Innovative community-based program
00:05:20
with the aim of creating a healthy
00:05:22
environment and healthy living by making
00:05:24
Essential Health Services available at
00:05:26
grassroot
00:05:28
level the program is a typical example
00:05:32
of a locally developed model which works
00:05:35
across different cultural groups because
00:05:37
it that does involve the people from all
00:05:41
levels and uh the use of C that are
00:05:45
locally
00:05:47
recruited that understand the culture
00:05:49
the language and so
00:05:54
on
00:05:58
spe
00:06:00
foreign
00:06:16
speee what we see from independent
00:06:19
studies is that the health extension
00:06:21
program is helping a lot in maternal and
00:06:23
child health prevention of malaria
00:06:27
tuberculosis HIV environmental and
00:06:31
personal hygiene are all in the
00:06:33
program community and personal ownership
00:06:36
of health is one of the major changes of
00:06:38
attitude that is playing a role in
00:06:40
making the health extension program a
00:06:43
success Ethiopia are very much of the
00:06:45
idea that improving health is a
00:06:47
collective effort so while the health
00:06:49
system can certainly provide treatment
00:06:51
and and preventative measures the onus
00:06:53
is also on the individual and the
00:06:55
household to make sure that they take
00:06:56
full advantage of these services that
00:06:58
provided and also to make some certain
00:07:00
lifestyle uh choices in terms of the
00:07:03
nutrition um and not always waiting for
00:07:06
that remedy but trying to actually
00:07:08
prevent the illness along with the
00:07:09
facilities that are provided to them
00:07:12
this is massive you know you know
00:07:14
changing the mindset of people within a
00:07:16
short period of time is very very
00:07:20
significant because you know once it
00:07:22
changes the mindset of people that they
00:07:24
can be responsible for whatever they
00:07:26
want to do including health I think this
00:07:27
a big one since it was first introduced
00:07:31
the health extension program has scaled
00:07:33
up rapidly its success was due in no
00:07:36
small part to the training of huge
00:07:38
numbers of community-based Health
00:07:40
extension workers we trained more than
00:07:44
38,000 Health extension workers we have
00:07:47
deployed two Health extension workers
00:07:49
per Village and the health extension
00:07:52
workers are teaching our communities on
00:07:55
how to promote their health and prevent
00:07:58
disas TR transfer skills and knowledge
00:08:01
so they can produce their own health so
00:08:03
we have already implemented it but we
00:08:05
have to really work hard to really uh
00:08:08
use the full potential of the sales
00:08:11
extension program that was meant
00:08:13
actually to enable communities to uh
00:08:17
produce their own health strategy is
00:08:20
that as a health post which is in the
00:08:23
village they're supposed to focus on
00:08:25
teaching the people on health and
00:08:28
disease prevention environmental
00:08:29
sanitation and then family health so the
00:08:33
health extension workers or working the
00:08:35
health post live with the people and the
00:08:38
health center also works on prevention
00:08:42
but also does treat patients so it is a
00:08:45
service delivery
00:08:47
chain prior to the health extension
00:08:50
program it was extremely difficult if
00:08:53
not impossible for people to get any
00:08:55
health services at all in the rural
00:08:57
areas there was very limited access to
00:09:00
family planning to clean and Safe Water
00:09:03
to immunization to treatment for common
00:09:07
childhood illnesses that those Services
00:09:09
either didn't exist or they were very
00:09:11
far from where people lived and so now
00:09:14
people have those Services right in
00:09:16
their communities a crucial ingredient
00:09:19
making the training within the health
00:09:20
extension program successful is Task
00:09:23
shifting task shifting is taking one
00:09:27
task that one Health worker does perhaps
00:09:29
a doctor and moving that task down to a
00:09:33
lower level uh provider so that the
00:09:36
doctor's time is freed up for
00:09:38
emergencies uh or critical skills that
00:09:41
only they can provide for instance
00:09:44
Caesar and section is traditionally or
00:09:47
normally done by uh surgeons proper
00:09:50
surgeons with you know uh general
00:09:53
practice initially and then specialize
00:09:56
in surgery but now we're training non
00:09:59
physician clinicians for 3 years to
00:10:02
acquire that that skill so we're
00:10:05
shifting that category cesarian section
00:10:08
for instance to our health officers
00:10:11
because we don't have enough uh surgeons
00:10:14
I think task sharing and task shifting
00:10:16
in this country have been tremendously
00:10:19
successful um especially when you were
00:10:21
talking about the primary preventive
00:10:24
healthc care uh such as immunization for
00:10:28
instance prior to theth Health extension
00:10:30
program immunization was always done at
00:10:32
a health center uh and it meant that
00:10:34
people had to travel a long way to get
00:10:37
uh to get immunization or it was done in
00:10:39
campaigns which meant once or twice a
00:10:41
year they would have access to
00:10:43
immunization now that they have shared
00:10:46
that task with a health extension worker
00:10:48
people can get immunizations for their
00:10:50
children in their communities or are
00:10:52
very close by to their communities and
00:10:55
they can get it at any time during the
00:10:57
year so that is greatly improved
00:10:58
coverage of immunization in this
00:11:01
country although Ethiopia spends more
00:11:04
per capita on health than World Health
00:11:05
Organization recommendations
00:11:08
16.1% it still has a long way to go
00:11:11
before for example it can ensure
00:11:13
Universal free access to healthare for
00:11:16
its population our government uh is
00:11:19
committed to uh achieving universal
00:11:22
access to all uh communities that's the
00:11:25
equity issue and we have already built
00:11:28
one Health post for 5,000 population
00:11:32
which mainly focus on health promotion
00:11:34
and his prevention and also we have
00:11:36
built Health Centers one Health Center
00:11:39
for 25,000 population which mainly focus
00:11:42
on basic Curative services so fulfilling
00:11:46
these two the first line the uh Health
00:11:50
post and the second line the health
00:11:51
center uh makes the access to Primary
00:11:54
Health Care complete resource is a major
00:11:56
challenge because the the country is so
00:11:58
ambitious the government is so ambitious
00:12:00
that it it wants to do so many things at
00:12:02
the same time and the health sector has
00:12:05
been very much dependent on funds coming
00:12:09
from Global Health initiatives like gav
00:12:12
Global fund paa Def and other European
00:12:18
countries a recent study reported a
00:12:20
decrease in Government funding for
00:12:22
health between 2002 and 2006 while
00:12:26
during this same period Ethiopia
00:12:28
benefited from a rise in international
00:12:30
health aid it has been estimated that
00:12:33
between 2003 and 2009 Ethiopia received
00:12:37
over4 billion US from International
00:12:40
funding Partners donors like a success
00:12:43
story so what they have found when they
00:12:45
invest in Ethiopia is programs such as
00:12:47
the health extension plan come about and
00:12:50
show immediate benefits and immediate
00:12:53
health
00:12:54
gains further substantial funding has
00:12:56
come from United Nations organizations
00:12:59
the gavi Alliance formerly the Global
00:13:02
Alliance for vaccines and immunization
00:13:04
and bilateral development agencies in
00:13:07
particular those of Ireland Spain Italy
00:13:10
and the
00:13:11
Netherlands a great deal of these funds
00:13:14
have been provided to the health sector
00:13:17
development Partners like the United
00:13:19
Nations Children's Fund UNICEF and the
00:13:22
United States agency for International
00:13:24
Development us Aid have also supported
00:13:27
the training of Health extension work
00:13:29
workers with technical support from
00:13:31
World Health Organization I know that we
00:13:34
do bring quite a bit of resources in uh
00:13:37
in 2011 I think our budget is about 300
00:13:41
million that we're bringing in a large
00:13:43
part of that is for HIV AIDS but uh it
00:13:46
also supports Health System
00:13:47
strengthening so it's supporting the
00:13:49
entire Health
00:13:51
System strong leadership in the
00:13:53
Ethiopian government means that it has
00:13:56
the confidence to plan for its people
00:13:58
and not BL mindly follow various donor
00:14:01
preferences they're not a passive uh
00:14:03
recipient that certainly came across
00:14:05
during my visit and during the
00:14:06
interviews and in The Wider literature
00:14:08
it seems that the Ethiopian government
00:14:11
have a plan um they are very proactive
00:14:15
and getting all the donors around the
00:14:16
table this is a government that knows
00:14:18
exactly what it wants to do it's
00:14:20
ambitious and bold and they are not
00:14:24
afraid of uh helping direct and form
00:14:28
what donor are doing and to say no to uh
00:14:32
programs and and activities that they
00:14:35
don't want and we I really appreciate
00:14:37
that I think that's uh that's the way it
00:14:39
ought to
00:14:40
be just over two decades ago the
00:14:44
situation in Ethiopia seemed hopeless
00:14:47
Ethiopia for example in the 1980s
00:14:50
Ethiopia was a disaster we had the
00:14:52
pictures of death and suffering brought
00:14:54
into our television screens every day
00:14:57
they have achieved a huge amount with
00:14:59
the health extension program with people
00:15:01
with basic skills uh now spread out over
00:15:04
the entire country and they're making
00:15:06
major inroads into maternal and child
00:15:09
health into sanitation into the
00:15:11
management of basic infectious
00:15:13
diseases Ethiopia may still have a long
00:15:16
way to go yet many things have
00:15:18
undeniably improved while there are
00:15:21
rightfully doubters and critics of what
00:15:23
the the government has achieved um and
00:15:25
the Ministry of Health but there's no
00:15:28
denying that have been these huge Health
00:15:30
outcomes over the last 25
00:15:33
years the interesting thing to watch out
00:15:36
for going forward is how the government
00:15:38
is still going to maintain this balance
00:15:42
of control over where it wants the
00:15:44
country to go but still not stifle um
00:15:46
the freedoms and the voices of those
00:15:48
that doubt what it's doing and maybe
00:15:50
criticize it a little and it's striking
00:15:51
this balance that um I think will be
00:15:53
important to look at in the
00:15:55
future the Ethiopian experience shows
00:15:58
that taking the community as a potential
00:16:01
producer of Health rather than as a
00:16:03
potential consumer of medicines and
00:16:05
Curative Services is a way forward to
00:16:08
achieve better outcomes in health we
00:16:11
open our mind see for alternative
00:16:14
options but there is always a way if
00:16:17
you're really committed to look look for
00:16:19
Alternatives and that's what is the
00:16:21
guiding principle of our uh government
00:16:24
to do anything to have Equitable
00:16:27
Services and have Innovative practices
00:16:31
at the Grassroots
00:16:39
[Music]
00:17:00
[Music]