Primary Health Car. Jean Yan, Coordinator Health Professions Networks Chief. Geneva

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Social Determinant ts of Health and Primary Health Car re Jean Yan, Coordinator Health Professions Networks Chief Scientist Nursing and Midwifery WHO, Geneva

Our world, Our health 20 2

What are the social determinants of he ealth? 3

Framework of the major categories and pathways of determinants 4

Under 5 mortality (per 1000 0 live births) by wealth group Poorest Less poor Middle Less rich Richest 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 (Houweling et al, 2007) Mali India Morocco Peru Kyrgyz Republic 5

Mortality over 25 years ac ccording to level in the occupational hierarchy: Whitehall All cause mortality (per 1000 perso on yrs) 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Admin 40-64yrs 65-69yrs Prof/ /Exec Clerical Other 70-89yrs (Marmot & Shipley, BMJ, 1996) 6

Growing inequalities in global health: the widening gap in infant mor rtality experience IMR: babies dying before age 1 per thousand born live IMR 1960-1981 1981-1999 decline (Percent) 160 140 World 38.5 26.9 120 100 SSA (UNICEF, 2003) Sub- 19.2 15.1 Saharan Africa (SSA) 80 60 40 World 1960 1981 1999 7

90 In 80 70 80 nfant mortality rate (deaths per 1,000 live births) (PAHO, 2005) 60 54 50 40 39 35 35 34 33 30 20 25 25 22 20 19 19 19 18 15 15 15 14 10 10 9 8 7 6 5 0 HAI 8 BOL GUA DOR NIC HON PER BRA ELS ECU MEX VEN PAR VEN COL PAN URU GUY BEL PR COR CHI USA CUB CAN

Life expectancy of Indige enous Peoples (Bramley et al, 2005) 9

Percent Population with access to health care services 1996- -1998 Ecuado r (98) 39.8 65.2 Bolivia (97) 29.9 54.8 Access to health services according to ethnicity (IDB, 2004) Peru (96) 33.9 56.9 10 0 20 Indigenas No Indigenas 40 60 80

The widening trend in mo ortality by education in Russia,1989-2001 (probability of living to 65 yrs when ag ged 20 yrs) (Murphy et al, 2005) 11

Infant mortality in Brazil education, 1990 by race and mother's (Pinto da Cunha, 1997) 12

Social exclusion in he ealth and environment 152 million people without access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation 13

Inequities Access to health care 1.3 Billion individuals globally with no access to health care 58 million of women ( out of 136M) who will give birth in a year, will receive no medical assistance during childbirth and postpartum period endangering lives of mothers and babies Health outcomes Life expectancy : 40 years difference between the high income and low-income, Norway 12 years within country Child health (under 5 mortality rate) : vast difference exist within countries and individual cities - e.g. Nairobi) - below 15/1000 in high income group, - 254/1000 in slums in the same city In many cases people who are well-off are generally healthier, have best access to the best care while the poor are left to take care of themselves 14

Commission on Social Determinants of Health Improve daily conditions - early childhood development, affordable housing, quality health care services Tackle the inequitable distribution of power, money and resources - responsibility for health at highest of government, coherence in policies across sectors Measure and understand the problem and assess the impact of action - monitoring system for health equity at all levels, sharing of new evidence 15

Why emphasize social de eterminants? Social determinants of health have a direct impact on health Social determinants predict the greatest proportion of health status variance (health inequity) Social determinants of health structure health behaviours Social determinants of heal lth interact with each other to produce health (Dennis Raphael) 16

Social Determinants of Health and Primary Health Care (Synergy) Much common ground Both advance holistic view of health, with primary value of health equity The Declaration of Alma implicitly re eferred to the social determinants Different relationship to healthh systems and broader context Primary health care starts with the health sector and reaches out to other sectors Social determinants discourse seess health sector as one of the social determinants Synergistic Report of the Commission and the World Health Report thus complement each other, and the Commission's findings will inform WHO's revitalisation of primary health care 17

The Essence of Primary Health Care "health is not a commodity that is given, it must be gener rated from within". "health action should not foreign to the people, be imposed from outside, it must be a res sponse of the communities to problems the ey perceive, supported by an adequate inf frastructure" frastructure" (Mahler, 1998) 18

Social determinants and Primary Health Care Socio-political determinants Socio-economic cultural, environmental conditions Universal coverage Quality health services Meet population health needs Equity in health And Well-being SD PHC Outcome Primary Health Care the key to attaining acceptable level of health for all people 19

The renewed PHC : 4 refo orm areas (WHR 2008) Universal Coverage Service Delivery Leadership Public Policy Health care responsive to the expectations of the public patient-centered, fair, affordable and efficient 20

Progress can be achieved in short time periods In 7 years In 9 years In 15 years LIFE EXPECTANCY 56 yrs ACCESS TO POTABLE WATER 15m POVERTY 33% PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLMENT 89% Sri Lanka 1946-1953 48 yrs South Africa 1994-2001 7m 18% China 1990-1999 Botswana 1970-1985 46% 21

Renewed PHC Progress is not a given: child deaths in 1975 and 2006 22

PHC s Impact on Populatio on Health 10000 PHC was a significant contributor to improved population health in OECD countries PYLL 5000 Low PC Countries High PC Countries PYLL= Potential Years of Life Lost 0 (Measure 1970 of 1980 premature mortality) 1990 2000 Lost Premature Mortality and PHC Performance In 18 OECD Countries, 1970-1998 23 Macinko et al., 2003

PHC s Impact on Populatio on Health PHC reforms in Costa Rica significantly reduced mortality in adults and children With reform ++ Without reform For every 5 additional years after PHC reform, child mortality was reduced by 13% and adult mortality was reduced by 4% 24 Trends in Under-5 Mortality in Districts With and Without PHC Reform Costa Rica, 1985-2001 Rosero-Bixby, 2004

Health Systems with Strong PHC Are More Efficient Stronger PHC 2 Primary Care Score 1.5 1 0.5 UK DK NTH FIN SP AUS SWE JAP CAN Weaker PHC 0 GER US BEL FR 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 Per Capita Health Care Expenditures 25 Starfield & Shi, 2002

The renewed PHC : 4 refo orm areas (WHR 2008) Universal Coverage Service Delivery Leadership Public Policy 26

Now More than Ever : Nu ursing and Midwifery Contributing to PHC Source: Compendium of PHC studies : 38 teams from 29 countries across 6 regions Universal Coverage: rural and remote areas - Korea : utilization of nurses as community health practitioners (CHP) a total of 1850, each responsible for 1500 2000 population. High satisfaction level from clients, improved health status and decreased risk behaviors ( smoking and drinking alcohol) - Belize : Community based psychiatric/mental health program by trained nurse practitioners ( 10 months). Mental health hospital closed ( only six beds in acute hospital),.national program staffed by nurse practitioners, only two psychiatrist needed at national level.. - Bahrain Adequate number of nurses and midwives trained to work in the 4 tiered health system. Results: 22 health centers opened through out the kingdom providing 12-24 hours of care. 2.8 million visits to health centers, increased diabetic visits, children screening and immunizations Service delivery - Yemen. Use of community midwives, increase in clinic attendance - Botswana : nurses providing family health. Sustained intervention for care of stroke patients resulting in families assuming responsibility for own health - Brazil : nurse led care during deliveries no maternal deaths from pregnancy or childbirth - Australia : Renal replacement therapy provided by nurse practitioners, no medical officers needed - Denmark : Care of the elderly provided by nurses. Health assessment, activities of daily living higher, average bed days lower, running costs for care- lower and life expectancy increased by 30% 27

Now More than Ever : Nu ursing and Midwifery Contributing to PHC Source: Compendium of PHC studies : 38 teams from 29 countries across 6 regions Leadership Public Policy - Haiti nurse led care in ambulatory and clinic care, resulted in gains in controlling malnutrition, malaria and TB - China nurse led innovation in community health ( rehab and palliative care) : Nurse coordinated the care provided by multi-disciplinary teams physiotherapists, nutritionists, optometrist, psychologist, music therapist, Results : improved aged persons ability to manage own well being, decrease in hospitalization - Canada nurse-managed care for medically deprived communities. Nurses coordinate and supervise the work of volunteers, community partners, town councils, business organizations, referrals to physicians.. 16 sites, 24 nurse managers, 18,500 clients( 1 nurse per 800 clients, average of 8-25 clients per day) - Oman : government commitment to increase access to basic health care brings long-term improvements, five year national health plan. Includes use of 1400 nurses, resulting in 85% increase in clinic visits, 1 PHC per 10,000 population, high immunizations coverage, fall in infant mortality rate ( from 170/1000 in 1970 to 16/1000 in 2006) - Thailand : one PHC per every village, Nurses of the Community Program 33 educational institutions, 300 administrative organizations, 60 community hospitals. Provide essential services : maternal and children, elderly, disease surveillance and control, involve in local policy development to improve quality life. All graduates are working in their own or nearby community. 28

Contributions of Nursing and Midwifery to Primary Health Care ( improved health outcom mes) Skilled attendant at birth saves mothers and babies Trained N& M can deliver approximately 80% of the health care and up to 90% of the pediatric care currently provided by primary care physicians at equal or better quality and lower costs Under utilization of nurse practitioners in the US cost the country as much as $ 8.7 B annually (Tournquist ' 97) Health Prevention and promotion better use of existing preventive measures reduces the global health burden of disease by 70% (WHR 08) Nurses a valuable resource for global health 29

The Health Workforce Nurses and midwives : The main providers of health care, urban and rural (improved access and coverage) Source: Australia's Health Workforce. Productivity Commission Position Paper. Canberra, 2005. 30

Investments in Nursing and Midwifery for Improved Global Health AMRO HRH target for 2015 India Zambia 1 : 1 ratio ( physicians and nurses) Argentina, Nurse Emergency Act 8M National Rural Health Initiative ( development of centers of excellence, use of advanced practice nurses) nation-wide opening-up schools of N&M Government's investment and continued support for the profession are Vital in making PHC a reality 31

Nursing and Midwife ery Service Messages from the Director Ge enerals- WHO Nurses Lead the Way that nursing could serve as a powerhouse of leadership in making PHC a reality. ( Mahler, 1985) Nurses form the backbone of health systems around the globe and provide a platform for efforts to address the MDGs and achieve its targets. If we are to succeed in achieving the MDG targets and improving health systems performance, urgent action is neededd to overcome the problems that seriously undermine the contributions nursing and midwifery services can make to the vision for better health for all communities. ( Director- General 2002) One of the indicators for MDG5, is that every birth be attended by a skilled health professional. This should be a midwife, doctor or nurse who has been trained to proficiency in managin ng normal pregnancy, birth and the period immediately afterwards ( Director- General 2008, First year report 2008, The Global Campaign for the Health Millennium Development Goals) 32

World of Global Health : Nursing and Midwifery Services Great Good Policymakers' continued investment in making PHC a reality Leadership Innovation Action Action (partnerships and team work ) and support for N&M are vital 33

All TOGETHER 34

The Vision the attainment by all peoples of the highest possible level of health WHO Constitution a state of complete physical, mental and social well- being and not merely the absence of disease 35

Our world, Our health 20 36

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