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Public Private Partnership in Health Service Delivery: Experiences & Lessons

Public Private Partnership in Health Service Delivery: Experiences & Lessons. A.Venkat Raman Faculty of Management Studies University of Delhi. WHY PARTNER WITH THE PRIVATE SECTOR?. Omnipresence of the Private Sector. 93% of all hospitals 64% of all beds 80% doctors 80% of OP and

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Public Private Partnership in Health Service Delivery: Experiences & Lessons

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  1. Public Private Partnership in Health Service Delivery: Experiences & Lessons A.Venkat Raman Faculty of Management Studies University of Delhi

  2. WHY PARTNER WITH THE PRIVATE SECTOR? A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  3. Omnipresence of the Private Sector • 93% of all hospitals • 64% of all beds • 80% doctors • 80% of OP and • 57% of IP ….are in the Pvt. Sector • (World Bank 2001) • Estimated at Rs. 1,56,000 Cr. in 2012 +Rs. 39,000Cr.. for health insurance(NCMH 2005) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  4. Share of Pvt. Sector- Non- Hospitalized care (60th NSS-2004) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  5. Share of Pvt. Sector- Hospitalized care (60th NSS-2004) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  6. Share of Private Sector in Rural Areas (NCMH,2005) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  7. Relative expenditure in the private sector - in Rural Areas(NCMH,2005) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  8. Who Pays for the Services?Percentage of Private Expenditure(NHA-2004-05) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  9. Implications >80% of health expenditure is out-of-pocket. (NSS 2005; NHA,2004-05) Debilitating Effects on the poor: Liquidation of assets, indebtedness. 40% of hospitalized & 2% in the country every year end up BPL (World Bank, 2001). Compounded by poor regulation of private sector A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  10. Private sector is needed because.... India needs an additional 750,000 beds 520,000 doctors overall investment of Rs 1,50,000Cr. 80% likely to come from the private sector (NMCH,2005) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  11. PPP MODELS & TYPES A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  12. Not all interactions between the Government and Private sector are PPPs A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  13. Financing vs Delivery:Public vs Private modes(Bloom, 2001) A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  14. Common PPP Models • Contracting (‘in’ and ‘out’) • Joint Ventures • Build/ Rehabilitate, Operate, Transfer • Health Financing (Vouchers, CBHI, Illness fund) • Mobile Health Units • Franchising • Social Marketing • Technology demos (e.g. Telemedicine) • Public-Private Mix A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  15. Core Principles of Partnership True partnerships entail • Relative Equality between partners • Mutual Commitment to Public Health objectives • Benefits for the Stakeholders • Autonomyfor each partner • Shared decision-making and accountability • Equitable Returns / Outcomes A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  16. PPP Models in Practice: A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

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  28. OTHER MODELS IN OPERATION A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

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  32. EMERGING MODELS • Regional Diagnostic Centres- Hub/Spoke • Medicity • Co-location of Specialty services • District Hospital + Medical College (Hub) • Franchised /Accredited Health Units • RBF – Incentive Contracts A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  33. Key Lessons & Challenges in PPP: Indian Experience A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  34. Political and Administrative Commitment • Half hearted support for PPP • Top officials are enthusiastic, but success takes them away- leadership vacuum; • Lower level officials suspect PPP as ‘privatization’ or show disdain towards the private provider A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  35. Institutional Capacity • Need for technical / managerial skills for designing, negotiating, implementing and monitoring PPP contracts • Develop institutional capacity at all levels, including oversight role. A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  36. Policy and Institutional Framework • Lack of policy driven strategy towards PPP in health sector. Need for a PPP policy. • Lack of information on Private sector thus poor regulatory leverage. • No institutional structures to manage PPP contracts. Need for specialized PPP cell in Health Dept. A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  37. Social Context of PPP • Antipathy or suspicion towards the private sector and govt’s failure to regulate -raise suspicion. • Unwillingness of ‘civil society’ organisations to explore PPP as an option. • ‘Squeamishness’ about profit making in services meant for poor patients A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  38. Diversity and Complexity of Private Sector • Private sector is diverse; Predominantly individuals (owner operated units) and from both recognized and unrecognized systems of medicine; • Diversity of tariffs, thus complicating information on cost vs tariff and tariff negotiations A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  39. Process of Contracting : Partner selection • Primarily ‘input’ based contracting rather than outcome based. • (Only) competitively selected partners are less effective. Priorities of : • Govt. Officials: Compulsion of L1 & Completing procedural formalities. • Private Sector: Winning the bid by all means A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  40. Risk • Financial risk to the private partner- Non-timely release of funds; Fear of enquiry. • Risk of unsuccessful/ failed contract leading to lack of services – patinets suffer, resources wasted. A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  41. Enabling conditions for success • Successful partnerships are contextual. Enabling conditions include • leadership from both partners; • prior consultation; • relational / trust based contracting; • pilot testing, • timely payment; • periodic review and amendments / revision of contract; • specific performance indicators….. A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  42. Key Constraints • Payment delays • Personality styles and trust level • Local political interference / political flip-flaps • Non-revision of contract clauses (Tariffs) • Lack of capacity or willingness to supervise / monitor / guide the project • Perceptual and attitudinal orientation to private sector • Lack of clarity of the objective of PPP A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  43. Limitations in Contract Features • Defining and verifying beneficiaries (BPL patients)- especially high cost services • Defining Quality or Performance or Outcome indicators; • Supervision and Monitoring mechanism; • Timely revisions / updating of contract; • Ombudsman for dispute settlement; • Clarity on user fee A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  44. Summary • Public-private partnership (PPP) is not privatization • Government continues to play a key role • Requires high degree of institutional capacity A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  45. In conclusion….Public Private Partnership • ……does help benefiting the poor. • …………one of the pragmatic options for health service delivery, but not an alternative to public delivery or better governance. A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

  46. THANK YOU Ref. Book: A.Venkat Raman & J.W.Bjorkman Public Private Partnership in Health Care in India: Lessons for Developing Countries. Routledge, London, 2009 http://south.du.ac.in/fms/idpad/idpad.html A.VENKAT RAMAN FMS-DU

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