The Quality of Health and Education Systems Across Africa

Page 26

The Quality of Health and Education Systems Across Africa

COVID-19: Challenging the resilience of health and education systems Today, COVID-19 poses new threats to human capital accumulation. The pandemic has dramatically affected health, not only through its toll on human lives but also through potential long-term reductions in healthy functioning among survivors of the disease (Mahase 2020). School closures and the shift to remote learning have reduced access to education and may prove particularly damaging for children from disadvantaged backgrounds and for girls (World Bank 2020b). Along with these direct impacts, the pandemic is also affecting systems and people’s lives through indirect mechanisms, including disruptions in non-COVID-19 essential health services and sharp declines in family income following lockdowns (Corral and Gatti 2020). The pandemic has affected both the supply of and demand for essential care, as providers have struggled to keep up with the care needs of patients with COVID-19; at the same time, many citizens have chosen to avoid health facilities, often forgoing needed care, in order to avoid potential COVID-19 exposure. Experience from previous epidemics suggests that the indirect effects on population health may ultimately cause greater harm than the virus itself (Elston et al. 2017). Evidence already indicates sharp drops in routine immunization coverage during COVID-19 (Jain et al. 2020). The impact on maternal and child health is expected to be especially severe. Early model predictions at the global level suggest a monthly increase in maternal and child mortality of up to 39 percent and 45 percent, respectively, attributable to COVID-19–related poor nutrition and interruption of essential health services (Roberton et al. 2020). On the education side, there is a potential “lost generation” of learners, reflecting the direct threat of the crisis, the prolonged interruption of schooling, and expected increases in poverty (UNICEF 2020). Worldwide school closures due to COVID-19 are likely to worsen learning disparities, as disadvantaged families are less able to facilitate home-based learning for their children. Dropout rates have increased, and many students no longer benefit from nutritious school meals or the structure, social engagement, and general support afforded by schools (World Bank 2020b). Although data on the pandemic’s impact on human capital are just trickling in, simulations show that the COVID-19 crisis may roll back a decade of hard-won human capital gains unless significant investments are made to protect human capital. With 26 million to 40 million additional people pushed into extreme poverty in 2020 (World Bank 2020c), disruptions in immunizations and other routine health services (WHO 2020), and widespread school closures (Human Rights Watch 2020), the COVID-19-induced risks are especially critical in Africa. The global economic downturn may also result in declining levels

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Appendix D: Methodological groundwork for the SDI teacher and student assessments

6min
pages 165-169

C.1 Example of a typical SDI education survey instrument

4min
pages 161-164

Appendix C: Survey methodology

7min
pages 157-160

B.1 Typical sampling strategy process for SDI surveys

7min
pages 152-156

Appendix B: Sampling procedures

1min
page 151

A.6 Definition of a correct treatment

4min
page 146

A.3 Definition and calculation of health indicators

3min
page 142

A.4 Definition of education indicators

4min
pages 143-144

SDI surveys: Turning measurement into momentum for reform

4min
pages 132-133

Rethinking service delivery

4min
pages 130-131

Results in action: How SDI surveys inform program operations

8min
pages 120-123

References

6min
pages 126-129

A wider perspective: Measurement as a public good for research

2min
page 124

Notes

2min
page 125

Improving comparability of SDI surveys over time

4min
pages 118-119

Understanding interactions with family background

4min
pages 116-117

Addressing determinants of provider performance

6min
pages 113-115

Adapting SDI surveys to different country contexts

14min
pages 106-112

References

8min
pages 101-105

concern during COVID-19

3min
page 90

Are basic requirements for learning in place?

4min
pages 82-83

location

2min
page 95

Notes

5min
pages 99-100

High- and low-performing schools: How can countries narrow the gaps?

2min
page 89

low-performing groups of students in nine African countries

1min
page 80

3.1 How does language of instruction affect test scores?

2min
page 81

Sample, methods, and framework

2min
page 73

SDI education surveys: Seeing basic education from the students’ perspective

2min
page 72

Background: Reimagining what education can achieve

1min
page 71

References

9min
pages 67-70

Conclusions: What will it take to improve service delivery in health?

6min
pages 63-65

African countries, by country and type of equipment

1min
page 58

Notes

2min
page 66

medicines in six African countries, by country and type of facility

1min
page 60

infrastructure

1min
page 56

Will health care providers be present in the health facility?

2min
page 42

Will health care providers be ready to provide quality care?

4min
pages 48-49

Sample, methods, and framework

2min
page 40

Will the necessary infrastructure, equipment, supplies, and medicines be available?

1min
page 54

Structure of this chapter

2min
page 39

location

1min
page 55

SDI health surveys: A finger on the pulse of primary health care

2min
page 38

by country and health facility ownership

1min
page 43

1.1 What do Service Delivery Indicators surveys measure?

4min
pages 29-30

COVID-19: Challenging the resilience of health and education systems

4min
pages 26-27

Human capital at the core of development

1min
page 25

References

1min
pages 23-24

Aims and structure of the book

2min
page 32

Data to drive change

2min
page 22

Background: An opportunity to transform primary health care

1min
page 37

Learning from the Service Delivery Indicators surveys

2min
page 28
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