...
首页> 外文期刊>International Journal of Integrated Care >The Zuellig Family Foundation: A Strategic Philanthropic Approach to Integrated Care
【24h】

The Zuellig Family Foundation: A Strategic Philanthropic Approach to Integrated Care

机译:祖利格家庭基金会:综合护理的战略慈善方法

获取原文
   

获取外文期刊封面封底 >>

       

摘要

In 2008, the Zuellig Family Foundation (ZFF) was established with the aim of improving the health of the rural poor in hard-to-reach areas in the Philippines. At that time, the Filipino rural poor lacked basic medical care, let alone integrated care. Statistics from 2008 underscored the health conditions of the poor: 40% of Filipinos went through life without ever seeing a doctor. UNDP Philippines reported the Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) had stalled after reaching 162 in 2006, making it unlikely to reach the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target of 52. UNICEF estimated that 11 women died every day from complications of childbirth, and that these deaths were mainly of poor women with little or no education. These dire health conditions were not helped by the decentralized health system, which put community health in the hands of politically elected mayors, local health officials and frontline health workers. Struck by these grim statistics, the ZFF decided to make the MMR the focus of its efforts to improve the health of poor communities. The Foundation developed programs to reduce maternal mortality according to the MDG5 targets, and tracked progress toward them. Drawing on Zuellig Pharma’s experience and strengths in creating distribution networks, ZFF set up a network of health centers and services for maternal and child health. These health centers served as nodes, connecting the different health and social services to the surrounding communities. Maternal health was a focal point and also a springboard to improve the health of the poor. Care of infants and children followed naturally, as did other health services including disaster relief and resilience-building. The connections created by ZFF went beyond the integration of health and social services with local communities. To support this structural integration, ZFF tapped on Zuellig Pharma’s management expertise to create a Health Leadership and Governance Program that brought together the different offices and officers in charge of rural health: mayors, health leaders and health providers. The program focused on training the mayors, local health officials and health providers to work collaboratively to improve health outcomes. ZFF also provided a Health Change Program, a roadmap for change that clearly indicated the steps to be taken to improve community health. From 2008 to 2013, the ZFF reported dramatic reductions in MMR in the municipalities where it worked. The MMR of municipalities in the first training cohort fell from 167 to 42, the second cohort from 193 to 55 and the third from 141 to 41. As a result of this success, the Philippines Department of Health approached ZFF in 2013 to begin a public–private partnership to scale the program from 94 municipalities to 609. The program was scheduled run from 2013 to 2016 and would include the geographically isolated and even poorer populations. The Foundation accepted the challenge and embarked on an expansion with academic partners and funding from agencies such as USAID. In its 2014 annual report, ZFF reported that it had worked in 525 partner municipalities and served 26 million Filipinos. To evaluate its impact and further improve scalability of its model and training programs, the ZFF tracked the MMR among its training cohorts’ municipalities. At the end of 2014, the MMR of all but one cohort had fallen significantly (e.g., from 225 to 51, and 502 to 227). ZFF was strategic in its vision and scale. It developed a structured, goal-oriented program that took the local culture into account. It also applied its business knowledge and capabilities to create a strategic, results-oriented program. It also consciously prototyped its programs and adjusted them to suit local conditions. This made the program, scalable and transferable to other regions. This case shows that integrated care need not always be initiated by the government. It is significant that a community organization — in this case, a private family foundation — can bring integrated care to remote, rural and poor populations.
机译:2008年,成立了Zuellig家庭基金会(ZFF),旨在改善菲律宾难以到达地区的农村贫困人口的健康状况。当时,菲律宾农村贫困人口缺乏基本医疗保健,更不用说综合医疗了。 2008年的统计数据突出了穷人的健康状况:40%的菲律宾人一生都没有看医生。菲律宾开发计划署报告说,孕产妇死亡率在2006年达到162岁之后停滞不前,使其不太可能达到千年发展目标52的目标。联合国儿童基金会估计,每天有11名妇女死于分娩并发症,而且死亡主要是受过教育很少或没有受教育的贫穷妇女。这些分散的卫生系统没有帮助这些可怕的健康状况,分散的卫生系统将社区卫生置于政治选出的市长,地方卫生官员和一线卫生工作者的手中。在这些严峻的统计数据的打击下,ZFF决定将MMR作为其改善贫困社区健康的工作重点。基金会根据MDG5目标制定了降低孕产妇死亡率的计划,并追踪了实现这些目标的进展。依托Zuellig Pharma在建立分销网络方面的经验和优势,ZFF建立了一个保健中心和母婴健康服务网络。这些保健中心充当节点,将不同的保健和社会服务连接到周围社区。孕产妇保健是重点,也是改善穷人健康的跳板。婴儿和儿童的照料自然而然地进行,包括other灾和抗灾力建设在内的其他卫生服务也照常进行。 ZFF建立的联系超出了将健康和社会服务与当地社区整合的范围。为了支持这种结构性整合,ZFF利用Zuellig Pharma的管理专业知识创建了“健康领导力和治理计划”,该计划将负责农村卫生的不同办公室和官员召集在一起,包括市长,健康领导者和健康提供者。该计划的重点是培训市长,当地卫生官员和卫生提供者,以共同努力改善健康状况。 ZFF还提供了“健康变化计划”,这是一项变化路线图,明确指出了改善社区健康所要采取的步骤。从2008年到2013年,ZFF报告其工作所在城市的MMR大幅降低。市政当局在第一个培训队列中的MMR从167人下降到42个,第二个队列从193人下降到55个,第三次从141人下降到41个。由于这一成功,菲律宾卫生部于2013年与ZFF进行了公开接触–私人伙伴关系,将该计划从94个城市扩大到609个。该计划原定于2013年至2016年运行,其中将包括地域偏远甚至贫困的人口。基金会接受了挑战,并开始与学术伙伴合作,并获得了美国国际开发署等机构的资助。 ZFF在其2014年年度报告中报告说,它已经在525个合作城市中工作,为2600万菲律宾人提供服务。为了评估其影响并进一步提高其模型和培训计划的可扩展性,ZFF跟踪了其培训队列所在城市中的MMR。 2014年底,除一个队列外,所有队列的MMR均显着下降(例如,从225下降至51,从502下降至227)。 ZFF的愿景和规模具有战略意义。它制定了一个结构化的,面向目标的计划,该计划考虑了当地文化。它还利用其业务知识和能力来创建战略性,注重结果的计划。它还自觉地制作了程序原型,并对程序进行了调整以适应当地条件。这使该程序具有可伸缩性,并且可以转移到其他地区。该案例表明,综合护理不一定总是由政府发起。社区组织(在这种情况下为私人家庭基金会)可以为偏远,农村和贫困人口带来综合护理,这一点很重要。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号