Calculating the Costs of Implementing Integrated Packages of Community Health Services: Methods, Experiences, and Results from 6 Sub-Saharan African Countries

Calculating the Costs of Implementing Integrated Packages of Community Health Services: Methods, Experiences, and Results from 6 Sub-Saharan African Countries

By: David Collins, Ulla Griffiths, Sarah Birse, Yohana Dukhan, Fadima Yaya Bocoum, Alfred Driwale, Humphries Nsona, Jerome Pfaffmann-Zambruni, Hannah Sarah F. Dini, Colin Gilmartin

Publication: Global Health: Science and Practice; 6 October 2023;11(5):e2200472. https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSPD-22-00472

Abstract

Ensuring access to a package of integrated primary health care services is essential for achieving universal health coverage. In many countries, community health programs are necessary for primary health care service provision, but they are generally underfunded, and countries often lack the necessary evidence on costs and resource requirements. We conducted prospective cost analyses of community health programs in 6 countries in sub-Saharan Africa—Angola, Burkina Faso, Madagascar, Malawi, Sierra Leone, and South Sudan—using the Community Health Planning and Costing Tool.

In each country, stakeholders defined a package of community health services and corresponding standard treatment guidelines to estimate normative costs, which were applied to program scale-up targets. The data were entered into the tool, and cost models were prepared for different geographical and service utilization scenarios. The results were reviewed and validated with the governments, implementing partners, and expert panels. Additional scale-up scenarios were modeled, taking into account probable constraints to increasing community health service provision and potential funding limitations.

The services and scope of community health service packages varied by country, depending on contextual factors and determined health priorities. The package costs also varied significantly depending on the size and contents of the service package, the service delivery approach, the remuneration of the community health workers, and the cost of medicines and supplies.

Community health programs and service packages are different in every country and change over time as they evolve. They should be routinely costed as an integral part of the planning and budgeting process and to ensure that sufficient resources are allocated for their effective and efficient implementation.