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2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA)

2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA). The Balanced Scorecard: A Tool for Developing the Health Sector Development Plan IV in Ethiopia 20 March 2011 Rahel Gizaw , MLI-Ethiopia Country Lead. Outline. MLI Balanced ScoreCard (BSC) Methodology

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2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA)

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  1. 2nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) The Balanced Scorecard: A Tool for Developing the Health Sector Development Plan IV in Ethiopia 20 March 2011 Rahel Gizaw, MLI-Ethiopia Country Lead

  2. Outline • MLI • Balanced ScoreCard (BSC) • Methodology • Outcomes • Challenges & opportunities • Next Steps • Global Lessons

  3. Ministerial Leadership Initiative For Global Health (MLI) • MLI - a program of Aspen Institute in partnership with Results for Development. • Funded by Bill and Melinda Gates & David and Lucile Packard Foundation • MLI objective: To strengthen the leadership capacity of ministries of health (MLI 5) to advance policy in 3 Major areas to foster country ownership and country driven approaches: 1. Health financing for equity, 2. Donor harmonization in health 3. Reproductive health http://www.ministerial-leadership.org/

  4. MLI Support To FMOH • FMOH Submitted A proposal to MLI requesting a support in Balanced Score Card- 2008 • Announcement of Ethiopia selection for MLI support –WHA 2008 • MLI approved the request but additional fund was required than originally allocated by Gates Foundation • MLI re- budgeted (including front loading spending) Following discussion of this issue with the Gates Foundation in December 2008, to accommodate the BSC work. • BSC work started in March 2009 – Country Lead came on board to work closely with FMOH in coordinating & managing the BSC work I

  5. What is a Balanced Scorecard (BSC)? • A Strategic Planning and Management tool for aligning employees’ day to day work with an organization’s mission and vision • A change initiative for communicating leadership and organizational goals • The BSC breaks strategy into actionable Strategic Objectives linked in a value creation story (a “strategy map”) through four distinct Perspectives • The BSC uses Strategic Performance Measures and Strategic Initiatives to attain or maintain targeted levels of organizational performance

  6. The Logic of BSC Strategic Planning Objectives Strategic Altitude Customer/ Stakeholder Needs 30,000 ft. Mission Vision Strategic Perspectives 25,000 ft. Strategic Themes & Results 15,000 ft. Strategy Map Performance Measures & Targets Strategic Initiatives Ground “Source: Balanced Scorecard Nine Steps to Success™ Strategic Planning and Management Framework, the Balanced Scorecard Institute.”

  7. Why was it right for the FMOH? • The FMOH has a deep seated commitment to improving performance and management in the health sector. • Before the BSC, the FMOH had already implemented: • a Results Oriented Program Appraisal (ROPA) process and • Business-Process Reengineering (BPR) • Adopting the BSC was the next step in using these tools for a coherent management and success strategy.

  8. Timeline of FMOH-MLI BSC Efforts Gates Foundation Increases Commitment to BSC Ethiopia’s participation in MLI announced at World Health Assembly FMOH requests BSC support from MLI FMOH-MLI BSC work initiated Health Sector BSC Developed Cascading March 2009 Early 2011 On-going 2008 http://www.ministerial-leadership.org/

  9. Outcomes • BSC is the only strategic planning and management tool for the GoE. • BSC was used as framework for developing the HSDP IV – a 5 year strategic plan for the sector. • >125 staff from the FMOH, Regions and Min. of Capacity Building trained in BSC methodology. • BSC User Manual and Evaluation Toolkit prepared for its use throughout the long term operations of the health system. • Experience of the MoHin Botswana provided valuable practical lessons for Ethiopia to shape BSC approach. • Strong leadership commitment and ownership from the FMOH

  10. Challenges Faced • There are many competing priorities within the FMOH • There is a significant time and resource investment in implementing the tool • Donors have limited interest in funding the BSC as they are unfamiliar with its benefits and how it can impact health outcomes • Some health sector staff perceive the BSC as mainly a measurement tool – the BSC was initially deployed as a limited performance measurement tool, and the use of the tool was not immediately connected to strategy execution and improved communication and organization performance. • A tendency amongst policymakers to try to reshape pre-existing planning and management systems into the BSC format • Shortage of HR and high turnover in the health sector

  11. Opportunities • There is strong political commitment from the GoE and health sector leaders to implement BSC. • The implementation of BPR prior to the BSC helped to improve strategic customer focus, a key element of BSC. • The BSC identifies strengths and weaknesses in the capacity of health staff and provides information to help address the gaps. BSC identifies high performing staff and helps managers to reward and retain top performers. • The FMOH has a strong culture of inclusive, top-down and bottom-up strategic planning processes in place. The capacity to think strategically is a key enabler for successful BSC systems.

  12. BSC Cascading Model National Strategic Guidance (PASDEP) Plan for Accelerated and Sustained Development to End Poverty Health Sector Strategy (BSC) Local Government Strategy FMOH Four Federal Health Agencies Regional Health Bureau Federal Hospital Team Directorate Zone HO Directorate Directorate Regional Hospital Team Team Team Team Woreda HO Team Individual Individual Individual Individual Kebele HO Team Individual Individual Team Individual Individual 14

  13. Next Steps /Way Forward

  14. Global Lessons • The committed engagement of high level leaders is essential to effective strategic planning and performance management • Communication between leaders, managers, and staff across the health sector needs to be interactive; the BSC provides a framework for this type of communication • Continuous investment in building the capacity of leaders within an organization is essential; the BSC is a good tool for capacity assessment • Integrating or leveraging existing planning and management tools and systems helps foster buy-in and sustainability for the BSC

  15. Acknowledgements Implementation of the BSC at Ethiopia’s federal level is supported by the Ministerial Leadership Initiative for Global Health (MLI) with technical assistance from the Balanced Scorecard Institute (BSCI). This work was funded by The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

  16. Thank You Merci Amesegenalehu

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