social protection health programming concepts and state of social protection development in kenya
DESCRIPTION
“When biological factors (like being too young or too old to work) are combined with negative life time shocks (such as sickness, unemployment, natural disasters, social conflicts) the case for social protection is overwhelming.” GERMANO MWABU, M.A., Ph.D, Boston University 1981, Professor and Chair Department of Economics, University of Nairobi, as presented at UNECA workshop on “Social Protection, Growth, Poverty and Inequality in Kenya”, July 14-16, 2010 Sector Determinants Targeted Cohort Social Protection ProgramsTRANSCRIPT
Social ProtectionHealth Programming Concepts and
State of Social Protection Development in Kenya
Sector Determinants
Targeted Cohort
Social Protection Programs
Social Protection Conceptual Illustration
“When biological factors (like being too young or too old to work) are combined with negative life time shocks (such as sickness, unemployment, natural disasters, social conflicts) the case for social protection is overwhelming.” GERMANO MWABU, M.A., Ph.D, Boston University 1981, Professor and ChairDepartment of Economics, University of Nairobi, as presented at UNECA workshop on “Social Protection, Growth, Poverty and Inequality in Kenya”, July 14-16, 2010
Sector Determinants
Targeted Cohort
Social Protection Programs
Concepts of Social Protection in Health Programming
I. Health and non-Health Sector OverlaysII. Cohort AttributesIII. Joined-up Sector Resource Leveraging
Economy andemployment
Securityand justice
Educationand early life
Agricultureand food
Infrastructure,planning and
transport
Land andculture
Housing andcommunity
services
Environmentsand sustainability
HEALTHHealth in All PoliciesAdelaide Statement
SocialDeterminants thatimpact HealthOutcomes
Agriculture & Food
Markets & Pricing
Harvest & Processing
Labor & Mechanization
Land Use & Distribution
Crop Diversification
Water & Irrigation
Transportation & Fuel
SocialDeterminants thatimpact AgriculturalOutcomes
Population Growth and Distribution
SocialDeterminants thatimpact HealthOutcomesEconomy and
employment
Securityand justice
Educationand early life
Agricultureand food
Infrastructure,planning and
transport
Land andculture
Housing andcommunity
services
Environmentsand sustainability
HEALTH
Agriculture
& Food
Markets &
Pricing
Labor &
Mechanization
Land Use &
Distribution
Crop
Diversification
Agriculture & Food
Land andculture
Environmentsand sustainability
HEALTHSocialDeterminants thatimpact Health andAgricultural Outcomes
HEALTH SECTOR Agriculture SectorAgriculture and Food Nutrition Crop Diversification
• Healthy food is critical to people’s health and good food and security practices help to reduce animal-to-human disease transmission, and are supportive of farming practices with positive impacts on the health of farm workers and rural communities.
• Food security and safety are enhanced by consideration of health in food production, manufacturing, marketing and distribution through promoting consumer confidence and ensuring more sustainable agricultural practices.
Illustrative Example from Adelaide Statement on Health in All Policies
Concepts of Social Protection in Health Programming
I. Health and non-Health Sector OverlaysII. Cohort AttributesIII. Joined-up Sector Resource Leveraging
Girls 12-18
Nutrition
HIV
Commodities
Education
Malaria
Cohort Attributes
Illustrative Example
Selected Sector / Intervention Resource Mix/Program Envelope
Transportation /Access
Health/PMCTAgriculture/Food Nutrition
Youth
HIV +
Female Pregnant
Public Health and Wellness
Social Protection Planning
Cohort Attributes(Girls 12-18)
Cohort Attributes
Illustrative Example
Concepts of Social Protection in Health Programming
I. Health and non-Health Sector OverlaysII. Cohort AttributesIII. Joined-up Sector Resource Leveraging
Sector Resource LeveragingAG HEALTH
Balanced Nutrition
Policy Work
IEC
Crop Diversificatio
n
1. Identify tangential Sectors for each Cohort2. Determine manageable interest of Sector for
specific intervention (e.g. crop diversification in Agriculture in the interest of balanced nutrition in Health for children, pregnant mothers, elderly)
3. Assess available resource of target sector as a ratio of value-added contribution (measurable in-kind or direct valuation)
4. Join-up resources with program agreements5. Capitalize National and Community Funding
Mechanisms
Sector Resource Leveraging
3:1
State of Social Protection in Kenya
[ Mary’s material these slides forward]