Evaluation of the administrative, coordination and financing capacity of the sub-national malaria elimination programs in Nigeria: a case study of cross river state.

IF 0.6 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Journal of Public Health in Africa Pub Date : 2024-01-01 eCollection Date: 2023-12-27 DOI:10.4081/jphia.2024.2276
Edima Ottoho, Donald Ikwun Omangand, Godwin Egbe John
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This study appraised the implementers' perspective of the program's existing administrative and management; coordination and collaboration; and financing and accountability capacities to deliver its malaria prevention and control mandate. The instrument used was a structured interviewer-administered questionnaire adapted from an already existing National Malaria Programme's Capacity Assessment tool. Being a widely used open-source program tool, a pretest was done to ascertain its suitability and applicability to the study context and for field assistants to gain familiarity with it. The total population sampling method was used due to the small size of the target population. The target population/sample size was therefore 137, comprising the State Malaria Technical Working Group members, key officers of Cross River State Malaria Elimination Program (CRSMEP), and the Local Government Areas (LGA) Malaria implementing teams. It was a descriptive cross-sectional study. Each element per section of the questionnaire was weighted using the Likert scale and calculated using simple percentages. Research results showed that the malaria program at the State and LGA level have adequate administrative and management capacity with confirmation by 64 and 82.1% of respondents respectively. 80% of respondents confirmed average coordination and collaboration capacity at the State level while 50% of respondents at the LGA level confirmed that the program has adequate coordination and collaboration capacity. For financing and accountability capacity, 36% of respondents affirmed that there is average capacity at the State level while 37.5% confirmed that there is no capacity at LGA level. The study revealed the program's capacity gaps at State and LGA in the 3 aforementioned key areas. Therefore, interventions to address the capacity gaps are training/re-training of program staff and health workers on program management, administration, and finance, establishing performance management and accountability mechanisms, conducting evidence-based advocacy visits to policymakers for prioritizing allocating and releasing funds for malaria control activities, especially for intervention areas that are not supported by donor/partner organizations.

尼日利亚国家以下各级消除疟疾计划的行政、协调和融资能力评估:跨河州案例研究。
这项研究从实施者的角度评估了该计划现有的行政与管理、协调与合作以及筹资与问责能力,以完成其疟疾防控任务。所使用的工具是一份由访谈者主持的结构化问卷,该问卷改编自已有的国家疟疾计划能力评估工具。作为一个广泛使用的开放源码程序工具,我们进行了一次预试,以确定其是否适合和适用于研究环境,并让现场助理熟悉该工具。由于目标人口规模较小,因此采用了总体人口抽样方法。因此,目标人群/样本数量为 137 个,包括州疟疾技术工作组成员、克罗斯河州消除疟疾计划(CRSMEP)的主要官员以及地方政府区域(LGA)疟疾执行小组。这是一项描述性横断面研究。问卷中每个部分的每项内容都使用李克特量表进行加权,并使用简单的百分比进行计算。研究结果表明,州和地方行政区一级的疟疾防治计划具有足够的行政和管理能力,分别有 64% 和 82.1% 的受访者确认了这一点。80%的受访者确认州一级的协调与合作能力一般,而 50%的地方行政区一级受访者确认该计划具有足够的协调与合作能力。在筹资和问责能力方面,36% 的受访者确认州一级的能力一般,37.5% 的受访者确认地方行政区一级没有能力。这项研究揭示了该计划在州和地方行政区在上述 3 个关键领域的能力差距。因此,解决能力差距的干预措施包括对计划工作人员和卫生工作者进行计划管理、行政和财务方面的培训/再培训,建立绩效管理和问责机制,对政策制定者进行循证宣传访问,以便优先分配和发放用于疟疾控制活动的资金,特别是用于未获得捐助方/合作伙伴组织支持的干预领域。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Health in Africa
Journal of Public Health in Africa PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
82
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Public Health in Africa (JPHiA) is a peer-reviewed, academic journal that focuses on health issues in the African continent. The journal editors seek high quality original articles on public health related issues, reviews, comments and more. The aim of the journal is to move public health discourse from the background to the forefront. The success of Africa’s struggle against disease depends on public health approaches.
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