From siloes to synergies: Ensuring everyone living with chronic diseases has access to essential healthcare
LMICs are experiencing a rapid transition from population disease profiles shaped by communicable diseases and conditions impacting mothers and their children, to those dominated by NCDs and injuries
- Kenya: Integrating HIV/AIDS and diabetes care in Western Kenya. Kenya Ministry of Health, Moi University, Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital, AMPATH consortium of North American Universities and Health Centres, with support from the World Bank, USAID, US National Institutes of Health, US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eil Lilly and Company, Merck, Pfizer and Takeda.
- Malawi: Integrated Chronic Care Clinic in Neno District. Malawi Ministry of Health supported by Partners in Health and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria.
- Zambia: Cervical Cancer Prevention Programme. Zambia Ministry of Health and Center for Infectious Disease Research, supported by PEPFAR, US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the University of Zambia.
- Leverage new and existing programmes and platforms to make them more integrated
- Include person-centred care indicators in funding requirements
- Create horizontal funding opportunities to promote an integrated agenda and stop/reduce initiatives which create separate data systems and supply chains
- Develop initiatives which take into account the care cascade (find-link-treat-retain) in integration efforts
- Build disease prevention into funding opportunities
- Help generate evidence about integration and invest in evaluation
- Provide leadership on integration and encourage coordination among stakeholders working across disease areas, ensuring that the full care cascade is prioritised
- Ensure people living with NCDs are meaningfully engaged in decision making and priority setting
- Collect multimorbidity data and incorporate into planning processes
- Take into account capacities and priorities of sub-national health service providers
- Promote the transition to UHC in a phased and context-specific way
- Actively seek integrated funding opportunities
- Actively build relationships with advocates from other global health priorities
- Amplify the voice of people living with NCDs by giving them a platform to share their experiences and ensure their meaningful involvement in integration design processes
- Call for the inclusion of NCDs in UHC and advocate to abolish user fees for health care
- Share successes and lessons learned about integration
- Generate evidence about integration for programme designers