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Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat International Health Policy Program (IHPP), Ministry of Public Health, Thailand The 3 rd Global Forum on Gender Statistics 11-13 October 2010 Manila, Philippines ESA/STAT/AC.219/35

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Page 1: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and

child health care in Thailand

Phusit PrakongsaiKanjana TisayaticomSudarat Tuntivivat

International Health Policy Program (IHPP), Ministry of Public Health, Thailand

The 3rd Global Forum on Gender Statistics11-13 October 2010Manila, Philippines

ESA/STAT/AC.219/35

Page 2: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Outline of presentation• Rationale of health equity approach• Data availability in Thailand• Concentration curve and

concentration index (CI)• Examples of assessing health equity

in selected Maternal and Child Health (MCH) indicators in Thailand

• Discussion and conclusions• The way forward

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Page 3: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Monitoring & Evaluation of health systems reform /strengtheningA general framework

Data sources

Indicatordomains

Analysis & synthesis

Communication & use

Administrative sourcesFinancial tracking system; NHADatabases and records: HR, infrastructure, medicines etc.Policy data

Facility assessments Population-based surveysCoverage, health status, equity, risk protection, responsiveness

Clinical reporting systemsService readiness, quality, coverage, health status

Vital registration

Data quality assessment; Estimates and projections; In-depth studies; Use of research results; Assessment of progress and performance of health systems

Targeted and comprehensive reporting; Regular country review processes; Global reporting

Improved health outcomes

& equity

Social and financial risk protection

Responsiveness

Fina

ncin

gInfrastructure

/ ICT

Health workforce

Supply chain

Information

Interventionaccess & services

readiness

Interventionquality, safety and efficiency

Coverage of interventions

Prevalence risk behaviours &

factors

Gov

erna

nce

Inputs & processes Outputs Outcomes Impact

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Page 4: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Rationale• Improving health equity is a key outcome indicator

for assessing health system performance of a country WHO framework on health system performance assessment (HSPA)

• Determinants of health equity– By gender and sex-disaggregated analysis, – other determinants (socio-economic status, educational

level, residential areas, etc.)

• Various dimensions of health equity – Access to and utilization of health care, – health care financing,– Health status,– Health risk behaviors, etc.

• Available MCH data from MICS 2006 in Thailand and insertion of household asset variables for computing ‘wealth index’

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Page 5: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Dimensions and Determinants of Health Equity

Healthcare

utilization

Health financin

g

Quality & responsive

-ness

Health status

Government subsidy on health

Health risk

behavior

DemographicGender

Age group

GeographicRegion

Urban vs. Rural

SocialEducation

Occupation

EconomicIncome

Wealth index

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Page 6: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Data availability for M&E system in Thailand (1)Data availability for M&E system in Thailand (1)Input Output Outcome Impact

HCF HRH Infra struct

ure

Gover

nance

Med/Health tech

HIS access

quality

safety

efficienc

y

Interven

coverage

Risk factor

s

H outco

me

Responsive

Equity

Finan prote

ction

Civil registration and vital statistics

Biennial SES

Biennial HWS

Census / SPC

NHES

MICS

Reproductive H survey

NHA

Note: SES = household socio-economic survey, HWS= Health and Welfare survey, NHES = National Health Examination survey, MICS = Multiple Indicator Cluster survey, NHA = National Health Accounts, HA = Hospital accreditation, SPC= Survey of Population Changes 6

Page 7: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Data availability for M&E system in Thailand (2)Data availability for M&E system in Thailand (2)

Input Output Outcome Impact

HCF HRH Infra structu

re

Gover

nance

Med/Health

tech

HIS access

quality

safety

efficiency

Interven coverage

Risk factors

H outco

me

Responsive

Equity Finan protect

ion

Facility-based report

H resource survey

HIS electronic IP database

Dis surveillance

Behavioral H survey

Sero-sentinelSurvey

Specific dis registration

Quality assurance (HA)

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Page 8: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

The concentration curve• The concentration curve graphs on the x-axis the

cumulative percentage of the sample ranked by living standards, beginning with the poorest, and on the y-axis the cumulative percentage of the health service use corresponding to each cumulative percentage of the distribution of the living standard variable.

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0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

Cumulative % of births, ranked by economic status

1990 2000 Equality

Cu

mu

lati

ve

% o

f d

ea

ths

Page 9: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

The concentration index

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• is defined as twice the area between the concentration curve and the line of equality (the 45-degree line running from the bottom-left corner to the top-right).

• In the case where there is no income-related inequality, the concentration index is zero.

• The index takes a negative value when the concentration curve lies above the 45-degree line of equality, indicating disproportionate concentration of health service use or other health variables among the poor, and a positive value when it lies below the 45-degree line of equality.

• The index is bounded between -1 and +1

Page 10: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Selected concentration curves of ambulatory service use among different types of health facilities in 2003

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Page 11: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Concentration curves of selected MCH indicators in Thailand, MICS data 2005-

2006

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Page 12: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Selected MCH indicators in Thailand from MICS data 2005-2006

Average prevalence or coverage

(%)

RR between urban and

rural

RR between Q5:Q1

Concentration

index

Teenage pregnancy

37.3 0.76*** 0.51*** -0.1073

Family planning

72.6 0.92*** 0.99*** -0.0005

Prenatal care by skilled health workers

97.8 1.0006** 1.05*** 0.0078

Low birth weight

8.3 1.15*** 0.92*** 0.0367

Underweight children

9.3 0.52*** 0.24*** -0.2192

Stunting 11.9 0.66*** 0.34*** -0.176712

Page 13: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

Discussion and conclusion

• Most MCH services in Thailand are concentrated to the poor.

• Major challenges remain in connection with health outcomes, particularly teenage pregnancy and child malnourishment.

• Remaining gaps between the rich and the poor, and between urban and rural areas require policy interventions and multi-sectoral actions.

• This analytical approach shows possibility in using health inequity intra- and inter-groups for gender-based analysis.

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Page 14: Using health equity approaches for assessing equity in maternal and child health care in Thailand Phusit Prakongsai Kanjana Tisayaticom Sudarat Tuntivivat

The way forward• Including sex-aggregated and gender-based analyses

in health-related M& E system

• Intra- and inter-group analyses in other dimensions of health equity e.g. health status, health risk behavior, disease burden, etc.

• Dissemination of key research findings and policy communication of gender-based health equity analysis

• Establishment of Health Equity Monitoring Network (HEM-Net) for domestic and international networks.

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