The Quality of Health and Education Systems Across Africa

Page 29

Introduction

BOX 1.1

What do Service Delivery Indicators surveys measure?

• What do providers know? Service Delivery Indicators (SDI) surveys directly measure teachers’ knowledge by assessing how teachers answer questions on the fourthgrade material they are supposed to teach. Health workers are presented with patient case simulations (“vignettes”) on symptoms of high-burden diseases such as malaria, diabetes, and pneumonia. Using the innovative methodology of vignettes, the SDI surveys are the only surveys of this scale that measure the knowledge of health care providers in a comparable way across countries. • What do providers do? Visiting unannounced, SDI survey enumerators assess the level of absence among teachers by observing whether classes are unattended and among health workers by cross-checking the presence of providers with the registry of personnel. With this pioneering approach, SDI surveys have generated the only internationally comparable data on provider absence in the education and health sectors, quantifying what many have only hypothesized. • What do providers have to work with? The quality of services is limited not only by the technical capacity and behavior of

providers but also by physical resources—for example, access to clean water, electricity, and improved toilets. Although vaccines may be available in most health facilities, in many cases refrigerators cannot maintain the temperatures required to store those vaccines properly. In schools, enumerators visually check that children have textbooks with them and that each school has toilets separated by gender. • What are children learning? Establishing a direct link between accessing care in a clinic and patients’ health status is complex. No single summary measure of health status is available in the literature, and, even if health status were easily and reliably measurable, after having seen a doctor, a patient could choose to be seen by a different doctor in a different clinic. Hence SDI surveys do not include measures of health outcomes. In contrast, the link between teachers’ quality and knowledge and children’s learning has been established in the literature. Moreover, children’s numeracy and literacy can be measured in comparable ways. When fielded in schools, SDI surveys therefore include a measure of education outcomes—children’s learning.

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the African Development Bank, worked together to develop novel survey tools and a methodology for measuring comprehensively the delivery of primary health care and primary school services. The first SDI health and education surveys were piloted in 2010 in Senegal and Tanzania. Since then, they have been scaled up to cover more than 15 African countries and adapted to settings outside Africa, such as Afghanistan, Armenia, Bhutan, Guatemala, Indonesia, Iraq, Moldova, and Pakistan, where work is ongoing or recently completed.

Are systems working for citizens? SDI surveys adopt the perspective of an average patient or student, with a focus on indicators of provider presence, provider knowledge, and physical inputs that seek to proxy from different angles the quality of everyday services. The surveys are undertaken through enumerator visits to a representative sample of health facilities or schools in each country, including both public and

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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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