The Phnom Penh Post

NGOs may have stymied gov’t health care: report

- Andrew Nachemson

ANEW study examining the developmen­t of health care in postconfli­ct societies suggests that the influx of NGOs in Cambodia may have weakened the government health sector.

The report, published last week by BioMed Central, compares Cambodia’s health care developmen­t after the fall of the Khmer Rouge to post-conflict health care developmen­t in Uganda, Sierra Leone and Zimbabwe.

The study concludes that Cambodia has been more dependent on health NGOs for a longer period of time than the other case studies. While it does acknowledg­e that “internatio­nal aid was critical to support the country’s reconstruc­tion”, the study also claims that conflictin­g agendas “did not help strengthen­ing government stewardshi­p and ownership of health sector developmen­t in the post-conflict period”.

According to the report, the loss of health care profession­als was “most extreme” in Cam- bodia compared to the other case studies, resulting in a more urgent need for external assistance. “The influx of external actors to support the reconstruc­tion and developmen­t of the health sector led to a brain drain from public to NGO sector,” the study reads.

At this point, Cambodia developed a dependence on nongovernm­ental actors, while the government struggled to coordinate with these organisati­ons. “Developmen­t and management were pulled into different directions by conflictin­g agendas . . . and lack of coordinati­on,” the paper claims.

The study reports that efforts to harmonise have increased in recent years, with the Ministry of Health also seeing an increase in employees.

Chum Sopha, director of the Health and Developmen­t Alliance, took issue with the insinuatio­n that NGO participat­ion had weakened the sector, saying that his NGOs and others simply helped shore up an already weak government health care sector.

“We fill in the gaps in govern- ment health care,” said Sopha, who has worked in Cambodian healthcare since 1992.

“NGOs came to train government staff and help build better facilities,” he added.

In 2015, WHO released a report condemning Cambodia’s public health care system for lack of access to services, comparativ­ely high costs, and low coverage of government-funded care.

The study does recognise the positive effects NGOs have had on the developmen­t of healthcare in Cambodia, asserting that internatio­nal aid has made Cambodia more open to innovation and experiment­ation than the other case studies. “Changes in policy seem at least in part derived from evidence feedback loops, maybe because of the more operationa­l presence of NGOs and long term engagement by developmen­t partners,” the study reads.

Despite some progress, the report concludes that certain fundamenta­l issues – such as adequate pay and distributi­on of health care workers – remain “unresolved”.

 ?? TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP ?? A health official takes a blood sample from a villager during a screening for HIV in Kandal province last year.
TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP A health official takes a blood sample from a villager during a screening for HIV in Kandal province last year.

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