“We understand global health needs to include disease prevention, quality care, equitable access and the provision of health security for all people. We define the global health system as the …
In this video we began a discussion about the structure, function and use of the health system at different levels within a country, something we will delve into in detail …
Systems thinking is easier for some people than others – and some people who work in health systems naturally think in non-linear, complex ways, even if they don’t give formal …
While health systems frameworks such as the ‘control knobs’ and ‘building blocks’ may be a useful starting point to understanding the core elements and functions of health systems, a more …
Not all “health systems strengthening” initiatives actually strengthen health systems. Having good frameworks to conceptualise health systems and guide action are essential, as the linked article by Shakarishvili and colleagues …
While there are many frameworks to describe health systems, the two most influential are WHO’s Building Blocks framework and the World Bank/Harvard’s Control Knobs framework. The World Health Organization’s “Building …
The global health privatisation debates were a large-scale version of a question asked in every health system: who should pay for health care, and how? And if the health system’s …
In your country setting, how were your health systems influenced by the Primary Health Care movement (if at all)? If you know something of this history in your own setting, …
The WHO’s World Health Report (2010) is the most recent of the World Health Reports to focus on health systems, and it lays out the vision for Universal Health Coverage …
How should global health be understood in an era marked by the rising burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), climate change and other environmental crises, integrated chains of production and consumption, …