Intended for healthcare professionals

Analysis

Building resilient health systems: a proposal for a resilience index

BMJ 2017; 357 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j2323 (Published 23 May 2017) Cite this as: BMJ 2017;357:j2323
  1. Margaret E Kruk, associate professor of global health1,
  2. Emilia J Ling, researcher1,
  3. Asaf Bitton, assistant professor of healthcare policy2,
  4. Melani Cammett, professsor of government3,
  5. Karen Cavanaugh, director4,
  6. Mickey Chopra, global solutions lead for service delivery5,
  7. Fadi el-Jardali, professor of health policy and systems6,
  8. Rose Jallah Macauley, country representative7,
  9. Mwihaki Kimura Muraguri, independent consultant,
  10. Shiro Konuma, minister8,
  11. Robert Marten, health systems strengthening coordinatior9,
  12. Frederick Martineau, research fellow10,
  13. Michael Myers, managing director11,
  14. Kumanan Rasanathan, senior health specialist12,
  15. Enrique Ruelas, senior fellow13,
  16. Agnès Soucat, director of health systems14,
  17. Anung Sugihantono, director-general of public health15,
  18. Heiko Warnken, head of the development for health, social security, and population policy16
  1. 1Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, US
  2. 2Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
  3. 3Harvard University, Cambridge, USA
  4. 4Office of Health Systems, US Agency for International Development, Washington, DC, USA
  5. 5World Bank, Washington, DC, USA
  6. 6American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon
  7. 7John Snow Inc., Monrovia, Liberia
  8. 8Mission of Japan to the European Union, Brussels, Belgium
  9. 9World Health Organization, Freetown, Sierra Leone
  10. 10London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
  11. 11The Rockerfeller Foundation, New York, USA
  12. 12UNICEF, New York, USA
  13. 13Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Cambridge, USA
  14. 14World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  15. 15Ministry of Health, Jakarta, Indonesia
  16. 16Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development, Bonn, Germany
  17. Correspondence to: M E Kruk mkruk{at}hsph.harvard.edu

Health system resilience begins with measurement of critical capacities ahead of crisis say Margaret E Kruk and colleagues

The 2014 west African Ebola epidemic shone a harsh light on the health systems of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. While decades of domestic and international investment had contributed to substantial progress on the Millennium Development Goals,1 2 national health systems remained weak and were unable to cope with the epidemic. Routine care of the population also deteriorated during the outbreak.1 2 3 4 Surveillance systems did not function effectively, allowing Ebola to spread within and between the countries. Global institutions were slow to respond to the crisis, squandering an opportunity to stem its course.5 6 7

Since then, diverse panels of experts have pointed to political and technical deficiencies in multilateral organisations in tackling health crises.8 9 10 11 These reports have noted that the first line of defence against future pandemics is an effective national health system. They have also called for better measurement of public health capacity, and investment to build resilient health systems—systems that can withstand health shocks while maintaining routine functions.10 The issue of how global bodies can support countries in withstanding future health shocks is playing out now in the election of the new director general of WHO, with several candidates making health system resilience part of their election planks.

Based on recent literature, this paper defines health system resilience as “the capacity of health actors, institutions, and populations to prepare for and effectively respond to crises; maintain core functions when a crisis hits; and, informed by lessons learnt during the crisis, reorganise if conditions require it.”12 Health system resilience is relevant in all countries facing health shocks—whether sudden (Ebola, earthquakes, terror attacks, refugees), slower moving (new pathogens such as Zika becoming endemic or epidemiologic transition), or the more chronic stresses that characterise even times that seem calm (drug shortages, loss of key health personnel, smaller outbreaks of endemic diseases). Yet, while health system resilience has been defined and widely discussed, there is debate about whether the concept has anything new to add to discussions on health system strengthening, and how resilience can best be built and measured.

As shown in figure 1, resilient health systems are aware, integrated, diverse, self regulating, and adaptive. These features do not arise in a vacuum: they require a foundation of strong local and national leadership, a committed health workforce, sufficient infrastructure, and global support. The last point is especially worth emphasising: resilience is not self sufficiency. Crises do not respect geopolitical boundaries and so resilience requires thoughtful interconnectedness or “smart dependency.”

Figure1

Figure 1 Resilient health system framework12

In this paper, we argue that the concept of resilience adds substantial value to the health systems discourse, and we propose measures of health system resilience.

Exploring the concept of resilient health systems

While the construct of resilience has been widely used in diverse fields, including ecology, engineering, and psychology, it is relatively new to health.13 14 15 16 17 With a plethora of frameworks and catchphrases crowding the global health lexicon, there are legitimate questions about the value added by the concept. We identify three contributions of the concept of resilience to the health systems field.

First, resilience emphasises the functions health systems need (figure 1) to respond and adapt to health shocks, introducing a dynamic dimension into more static health system models which can help the system cope with surges in demand and adapt to changing epidemiology and population expectations of care.18 A rigidity of mission characterises the operations of many countries’ health systems, whose ethos and organisation is better suited to yesterday’s disease burden than tomorrow’s, focusing mostly on basic, episodic care, unequipped to provide advanced care for infections, longitudinal care for a broad spectrum of chronic diseases, or emergency care needed to respond to the rising tide of injuries.

Second, the concept contributes useful new ideas to health systems from other sectors. Solutions for supply chains and logistics to respond to surges in demand from other fields may be relevant.19 20 Building trust and promoting meaningful community engagement have been studied in other fields, such as environmental sustainability and political science, but have not been well operationalised in health systems science.21 22 23 Resilience draws on complex systems notions identified as important in health systems but rarely acted upon, such as the interconnectedness of health and non-health actors and the importance of feedback loops.24

Finally, the concept of resilience helps bridge disparate health and development agendas—such as universal health coverage, the Global Health Security Agenda, and the Sustainable Development Goals—lending fresh impetus to the need to invest in health systems.25 26 27 28 It identifies the immediate and longer term payoffs of well functioning, responsive, and adaptable health systems and highlights the unacceptable costs of inaction. By containing outbreaks, returning to baseline function faster, and mitigating other shocks, resilient health systems can contribute to economic stability.29 The recognition that health systems are the front line for dealing with the next big threat to global health security amplifies the urgency of strengthening them and draws in new actors and ideas.10

The increasing attention to resilience in global health has, however, prompted criticisms of the concept. One is that it is an imposed, technocratic solution that obscures the socioeconomic and political factors that lead to inadequate responses to shocks. These factors may include unfavourable trade terms, weak citizen engagement, and chronic health system deficiencies.30 31 32 33

There are also worries about short term timeframes for action when problems are multifactorial, and a paradoxical push for national self reliance when threats readily cross borders.31

While these concerns highlight the potential for resilience to be used as shorthand for a narrow preparedness agenda, they do not accurately represent the meaning of health system resilience as intended here. Building resilience is much more than preparedness; it involves investment in institutions, preconditions (like an effective health workforce) and other “slow variables.” Communities should not have to shoulder crises alone; instead meaningful government engagement is needed to ensure responsive health services that people trust and want to use.12 Imposed technocratic solutions will not bring about needed change, and the particular arrangements needed to promote resilience have to emerge from the country’s context. Value judgments about what constitutes resilience for whom should be made explicit. Ordinary people may lack the power to shape the health system response or hold it to account; the process of building resilience should foster that power. Building resilience should be integrated with existing efforts to strengthen health systems and its success should be judged on equitable health gains rather than the security of wealthy nations.

Resilience in action

We present three case studies, in which several of the authors were involved, where a range of large health shocks contributed to improved health system resilience: chronic system dysfunction aggravated by a population influx in Lebanon; sudden and severe infectious disease outbreak in Liberia; and repeated, anticipated disaster shocks in Indonesia.

Box 1: Integrated approaches to care for diverse needs: working with non-state actors during the Syrian refugee influx in Lebanon

Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011, Lebanon has had an unprecedented influx of refugees, increasing its population by 1.5 million, or 30%.34 The Syrian crisis persists today, placing continuing strain on Lebanon’s health system. Lebanon’s health system has demonstrated resilience by rapidly mobilising and expanding its diverse primary care capacity in the public and private sectors.

Initial refugee health relief focused on short term assistance delivered by multiple organisations.37 38 The fragmentation of early relief efforts motivated the ministry of public health to establish a steering committee to streamline relief funding and encourage transparency and accountability across international and national health actors.39

Primary healthcare grew to be the central platform for the response. In 2015, the government and its multi-sectoral partners (including UNHCR, UNDP, World Bank, and NGOs) established 20 new public health centres and directly supported 100 private health centres, increasing primary care capacity by 40%.40 Covered services include non-communicable disease screening, nutrition services, and mental health support.40 41 Additions to the epidemiological surveillance system improved the ability to detect emerging diseases, contributing to the country’s quick response to polio threats.42

Despite early successes in primary care, access to Lebanon’s secondary and tertiary healthcare systems continues to be a challenge for refugees.40 41 Recent estimates suggest that approximately 26% of the refugee population needs secondary healthcare, however 23% of those are unable to access it, primarily because of high fees (71%).43 Financial assistance is limited to specific conditions and requires co-payment, which contributes to substantial financial burdens for refugees.40 41 44

Box 2: Learning from failure: communicating with communities during Liberia’s Ebola crisis

At the peak of the 2014 Ebola epidemic, Liberia reported 300 to 400 new cases each week and had the highest incidence of Ebola deaths of the affected west African nations.45 Meanwhile, non-Ebola patients were neglected—health facilities lacked testing and isolation capacity and thus turned down patients who appeared sick.46 Some facilities simply stopped providing services altogether. Some urban and rural communities resisted surveillance and disease control efforts, believing Ebola was purposely introduced by the government and foreign institutions to gain profits from emergency response activities.46 47 48 Trust was further eroded by inadequate response from Ebola task forces and help hotlines when neighbours fell ill.47

Gradually, Ebola treatment units opened and health facilities resumed services. At the same time, the ministry of health and partner NGOs launched a series of public health messages beginning with “Ebola kills,” intended to emphasise the gravity of the epidemic.49

This approach backfired. Communities reasoned that if Ebola was fatal then affected people should avoid treatment units and instead wait to die at home, supported by family.49 Public messages gradually evolved to “the earlier you report Ebola, the more likely you are to survive.” Traditional leaders were enlisted to support community training in all 88 counties and spread messages in local dialects.50

To improve the effectiveness of the epidemic response, communities were directly engaged in surveillance. In West Point, Monrovia’s largest slum, community and traditional leaders were assembled to discuss concerns and propose a locally driven solution for Ebola surveillance in the densely populated area.50 51 A system for active case finding developed. Leaders recruited community volunteers to complete ministry led surveillance training, which eventually led to the deployment of 152 active case finders and 15 psychosocial support workers.51 Active case finders and psychosocial support workers helped identify potential Ebola cases, reduce caregiver transmission, and promote burials by trained “safe and dignified” burial teams.

Box 3: Improving self regulation: coordinating multiple actors during natural disasters in Indonesia

Spread across three major geologic fault lines, Indonesia experiences periodic earthquakes and tsunamis. Each recent disaster has tested the country’s health system and led to progressive adaptation.

The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami devastated the province of Aceh.52 Overnight, 106 health facilities in Aceh were damaged or destroyed, and more than half of the health workforce was displaced or killed.53 54 The government struggled to organise a response and assistance was further delayed by security concerns: Aceh had been the site of recent battles between the government and the Free Aceh Movement, a guerrilla separatist group.55 56

When aid arrived, provision was chaotic with duplication of efforts in some areas and gaps in services in others. It took two weeks to establish a disaster coordination centre, and nearly a month for the Aceh health system to resume function.

Two years later during the 2006 Yogyakarta earthquake, the national response was remarkably different. Hours after the earthquake the president of Indonesia temporarily relocated his office to Yogyakarta to support the National Disaster Management Agency emergency efforts.57 While 67 of 115 health centres in Yogyakarta were damaged or severely destroyed, domestic health teams were quickly mobilised to provide emergency relief.58 59 The response to this earthquake—both more efficient and more locally driven—was informed by lessons learnt from Aceh and the absence of conflict in the area.

Learning from these experiences, Indonesia established nine regional crisis mitigation centres in 2009.60 Strategically located in disaster prone areas, these centres are proactively equipped with staff, vehicles, and emergency supplies, and perform community outreach with local health facilities in between natural disasters, teaching basic first aid and natural disaster response.61 62

Awareness is the capacity to detect and interpret local warning signs and quickly call for support. Liberia’s initial paralysis during the Ebola epidemic was partly caused by poor understanding, at all levels, of the disease severity. Self regulation is the ability to isolate threats and maintain core functions under stress. While Ebola treatment units are a classic example of self regulation (in Liberia’s case, these came too late to mitigate spread), Lebanon’s emergency vaccination and surveillance efforts, and Indonesia’s regional crisis mitigation centres can also be seen as homoeostatic innovations for containing health threats.

Indonesia’s case also shows the value of learning and adaptation: in anticipation of future catastrophic weather events crisis mitigation centres were instituted after the country experienced poor coordination after tsunamis. In each of these case studies, most elements of resilience emerged after a crisis rather than ahead of it. As we note below, future research should consider how the elements of resilience perform when adopted before the event.

The value of having diverse healthcare providers that can coordinate with each other is seen in the case of Lebanon, which is now hosting 1.8 million refugees from Syria, increasing its population by over 30%.34 To meet the challenge of much larger numbers of people seeking care, the ministry of health has expanded primary care to tackle the multiple health needs of both refugees and citizens. This has been done in part through consultation and contracting with private sector providers, including faith based providers; an example of integration among diverse health actors who in the past may not have worked together.

Integration also draws attention to the key mediating role that broader state-society relations play during crises, including the recognition of people as producers of their health and thus as co-architects of an effective crisis response. Involving people and communities in crafting a response depends on—and is a potential means of—strengthening government accountability to its citizens. Stronger mechanisms for state-society partnerships allow government officials to weave the experience, expectations and capabilities of affected people into the containment strategy for a more powerful and empathetic response. Identifying ways to work effectively with local leaders was a critical lesson from Liberia during the recent Ebola epidemic. Community leaders were critical in case finding, community mobilisation, and other epidemic control measures.

Measuring resilience capacity: the resilience index

Recent international panels reviewing the Ebola response have called for measurement of health system resilience capacity ahead of crises.10 35 36 Building on the conceptual framework described in figure 1, we have outlined a set of preliminary measures of national health system resilience (table 1). They include existing health system and preparedness metrics (from the International Health Regulations, the Global Health Security Agenda, and the Sustainable Development Goals), relevant measures from non-health fields, and new proposed measures that need further development and testing. This proposed resilience index balances slow (availability of district health staff with public health training, for example) and fast (such as provisions to reallocate money in emergencies) drivers of resilience. In contrast to traditional health security frameworks, many of our indicators reflect characteristics of “everyday” resilience; they not only encourage daily function but also proactively reduce the likelihood of rising system threats. The index can thus inform development of national health plans. It can also expose gaps in function and measurement capacity where regional and global cooperation can contribute.

Table 1

Resilience index

View this table:

The index does not prescribe national benchmarks. Given the heterogeneity of health systems and national contexts, benchmarks for resilience indicators should be set within countries to accommodate the local context. The next step would be to review and extend this list as needed, and to develop indicators for the new measure constructs, with input from community leaders and non-health sector actors. While the index is meant to be prospective (used in advance of a crisis), some proposed measures include routinely collected service delivery and quality indicators that over time can indicate the “slope” of resilience (the extent and speed with which a system returns to baseline or better after a shock). The validity of the resilience index should be tested against actual performance during recent health shocks in several settings.

Conclusion

Before the failure of health systems during the Ebola outbreak is forgotten, we need to consider how to make them more resistant to crises and more flexible in their response. The concept of resilience adds dynamism and urgency to the longstanding work of health system strengthening and gives an opportunity to learn from other sectors. Country experiences as varied as Lebanon, Liberia, and Indonesia demonstrate how resilience can be built after health crises. Proposed measures of health system resilience can improve our assessment of countries’ progress in building resilience and indicate areas for action. We hope implementation of these ideas can energise policymakers and ultimately benefit families and communities in times of crisis and beyond.

Key messages:

  • National health systems are the first line of defence against health crises

  • Health systems today are rigid and slow to adapt; they must become more resilient to effectively respond to crises and maintain core services

  • Resilience requires planning and investment in slow variables (for instance, health workers, managers, information systems) and fast variables (such as isolation wards, protective equipment, surveillance). It requires methodical building of collaboration and trust with communities ahead of crisis.

  • The resilience index proposed here is designed to help countries assess whether their health systems can withstand future shocks; it should be tested in countries at high risk of health shocks.

Footnotes

  • Acknowledgments: This paper stemmed from discussions at The Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center. We are grateful to The Rockefeller Foundation for supporting the meeting and related research on resilience. The views expressed here are the responsibility of the authors and may not reflect the views of the foundation.

  • Author contributions: MEK conceived the idea and structure of this paper and wrote the first draft with assistance from EJL. All authors contributed intellectual content, edited the manuscript, and approved the final version for submission.

  • Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed

  • Competing interests: Fred Martineau has had a grant from the Wellcome Trust

References

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