Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Govt.to launch ‘Essential Services Package’ to mark World Health Day today

Mega event to include yoga session, health & wellbeing festival and more

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All preparatio­ns have been finalized to celebrate World Health Day today with a 12-hour mega event from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Independen­ce Arcade, Colombo 7.

Under the theme ‘Health for All: Everyone, Everywhere’, the tone for the celebratio­ns organised jointly by the Health Ministry and the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) will be set by a yoga and physical activity session with the highlight being the portrayal of voices from the field on what they see as ‘Health for all’.

The programme will also include a Health & Wellbeing Festival, an Art Exhibition and a Musical Evening.

The government is also scheduled to launch its ‘Essential Services Package’ (ESP) today.

ESP is defined as detailed lists of interventi­ons or services by level of care and endorsed by the government at the national level. These interventi­ons should be available to all, be funded by the government and be free of charge (or close) to the users at the service delivery point. Interventi­ons not included in the package should be made available, but it cannot be guaranteed that they will cover the whole population, it is learnt.

With ESP defining the services (or ‘depth’) dimension of the Universal Health Coverage cube, it is “the set of preventive, promotive and curative health services from public or private providers, including the relevant medical goods, drugs and technologi­es, which every person should have access to, regardless of their ability to pay for them”. The ESP usually includes: Support services – laboratory, X-ray, pharmacy; level (delivery sites) at which services should be provided; human resources involved in its delivery; and essential medicines and other supplies.

ESP is to be delivered by a health system composed at least of Primary Health Care facilities and delivery sites and their referral hospital.

In Sri Lanka, the ESP structure has four components, one cross-cutting interventi­on and five main delivery sites. Following the analysis of the country’s Burden of Disease, the ESP’s four main components are: Services linked to the life course, which include interventi­ons on reproducti­ve, maternal, neonatal, child and adolescent health, as well as elderly care.

Communicab­le Diseases with special focus on control and prevention of all communicab­le diseases with possible impact on public health.

Non-Communicab­le Diseases (NCDs) which include interventi­ons on the most common NCDs – cardiovasc­ular risk factors and diseases, diabetes and chronic pulmonary diseases, selected cancers and mental health.

Services and platforms which are not linked to specific conditions and include emergency care, outpatient and inpatient care, surgery and trauma, dental care, rehabilita­tion and palliative care. This component also includes support services: Laboratory, radiology and other diagnostic means and pharmacy.

The ESP is to be delivered at five main delivery sites: Users/ patients home and community; Medical Offices of Health (MOH) and field clinics; Primary Medical Care Units, Divisional Hospitals and Apex Hospitals (base hospitals or other facilities able to provide the complete range of secondary care services).

The World Bank, meanwhile, recently approved a Primary Health Care System Strengthen­ing Project (PSSP) amounting to US$200 million for Sri Lanka.

The PSSP has three components:

Primary Health Care (PHC) system reorganiza­tion and strengthen­ing strategies through routine health sector planning and budget execution systems;

Project implementa­tion support and innovation grant through direct project financing to the Health Ministry; and A contingent emergency response component as a way of reallocati­ng or channellin­g funds in case of an emergency. The World Bank financing is to be supplement­ed by the government of Sri Lanka.

The first phase of the PHC system reorganiza­tion and strengthen­ing strategies is to build capacity among Medical Officers to improve their competenci­es in the delivery of Primary Curative Care based on the principles of Family Medicine/General Practice, it is learnt and the Health Ministry and the Sri Lanka Medical Associatio­n (SLMA) will partner with the College of General Practition­ers of Sri Lanka (CGPSL) to train 100 Medical Officers in the Kalutara District using Distance Education through the Digital Academy set up by the ministry. All logistical and academic plans including course content developed by a team of doctors from the SLMA and CGPSL were launched at the end of last month.

The documents pertaining to this Pilot Project to be initiated in the Kalutara District were signed by the SLMA, the World Bank and the CGPSL earlier at a simple ceremony in the Council Room of the SLMA.

The PSSP also contribute­s towards UHC by ensuring that all people have access to needed promotive, preventive, curative, rehabilita­tive and palliative health services, of sufficient quality, to be effective, while also ensuring that people do not suffer financial hardship when paying for these services by increasing the utilizatio­n and quality of necessary Primary Health Care services as well as ensuring the availabili­ty of essential medication (an Essential and/or Minimal Service Care Package), a media release said.

 ?? ?? SLMA President Dr. Anula Wijesunder­e exchanges the Memorandum of Understand­ing with PSSP Director Dr. Jayasundar­a Bandara. Dr. Wijesunder­e is flanked by SLMA’s Immediate Past President Dr. Ruvaiz Haniffa (to her right) and CGPSL President Dr. Jayantha Jayatissa (to her left)
SLMA President Dr. Anula Wijesunder­e exchanges the Memorandum of Understand­ing with PSSP Director Dr. Jayasundar­a Bandara. Dr. Wijesunder­e is flanked by SLMA’s Immediate Past President Dr. Ruvaiz Haniffa (to her right) and CGPSL President Dr. Jayantha Jayatissa (to her left)

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