Resources


Cover of Financing and Payment Models for Primary Health Care

Financing and Payment Models for Primary Health Care: Six Lessons from JLN Country Experience

December 22, 2017

In most countries, primary health care (PHC) providers are the first point of contact that most people have with the larger health care system. Primary health care is accessed the most by patients and can have the greatest impact on health outcomes compared with other parts of the system. However, many countries find it challenging to improve their PHC systems. Financing and payment models for PHC can be important tools for strengthening primary care and addressing issues of access, quality, and equity in health care. Since January 2016, the JLN Provider Payment Mechanisms (PPM) technical initiative has convened a collaborative learning exchange on primary health care financing and payment. Through the exchange, policymakers and practitioners from 15 JLN member countries and three resource countries have shared their experience and reached consensus on a set of early lessons that can be adapted and used by other countries to guide implementation of effective PHC financing and payment models. This paper presents six important early lessons emerging from the collaborative learning exchange that can be adapted and applied by other countries that face similar challenges or are embarking on PHC reform efforts. The paper also identifies helpful resources with guidance that countries can adapt to their own contexts. The production of this paper was funded by the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) through the Global Alliances for Social Protection program, along with grants to the JLN Provider Payment Mechanisms technical initiative from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation.

Thumbnail of the Costing Manual emodule

eModule: Costing of Health Services for Provider Payment Manual

October 10, 2017

A digital companion course to the JLN Costing of Health Services for Provider Payment manual.

Cover of the Costing Workshop Training of Trainers Curriculum

Costing Train the Trainer Course Materials

February 4, 2016

This folder contains all of the course materials required to organize a 5 day workshop on costing, including quizzes, homework and exercises.

Thumbnail of the listing of resources included in the Costing Manual Toolkit

Costing Manual Toolkit

July 8, 2015

The Costing Manual Toolkit includes more than 40 tools and templates found in the Costing Manual that can be adapted to a variety of contexts due to the unique, collaborative approach used in its design.

Cover of Costing Health Services for Provider Payment: a Practical Manual

Costing of Health Services for Provider Payment: A Practical Manual

October 19, 2014

This is the first costing-specific resource that bridges costing theory — what you should do — with practical, step by step guidance on what you can do to address multiple challenges related to costing for provider payment in low and middle income countries (LMICs). Developed by the JLN Costing Collaborative, with support and facilitation from Results for Development Institute, the Manual takes traditional guidelines on step-down cost accounting one step further by providing practical options to overcome the real life challenges associated with costing in LMICs. Some common challenges addressed in the manual include data constraints, different concerns of public and private providers, weak cross-institutional collaboration, among others. This Manual provides tools and templates based on the day-to-day experiences of a network of practitioners that can be adapted to a variety of contexts due to the unique, collaborative approach used in its design. The diversity of experiences reflected in each step of the Manual offers a range of options that practitioners from other countries can draw on to become their own costing experts to improve provider payment policy processes. Access the Costing Manual Toolkit. The Costing Manual is accompanied by an online course, developed by the World Bank’s Open Learning Center and designed specifically for the busy practitioner in mind.