Health systems strengthening


Health systems strengthening is a term used in global health that roughly means to improve the health care system of a country. Within this general definition, it can mean increasing funding for health infrastructure, improving health policy, trying to achieve universal healthcare, or any number of other health measures.
There has been some effort to use a systems thinking approach to health systems strengthening.

Organizations that use health systems strengthening

Various health organizations have claimed to use health systems strengthening. Some of these are:
Both the idea of health systems strengthening and the term itself have received attention.
Even advocates of health systems strengthening admit that it can often seem like a "distant, even abstract aim".
Marchal et al., writing in 2009, called the term "vague" and argued that "most current HSS strategies are selective, and their effects may undermine progress towards the long-term goal of effective, high-quality, and inclusive health systems."
Peter Berman, who was the lead health economist at the World Bank, has pointed out that "Almost any support to health interventions can be considered HSS".