Partnership for Primary Health Care Services (PPHCS) ProjectPlease note that this is a closed, archived program. September 2003 - August 2006 Pact began working in Myanmar in 1996 with implementation of microfinance services for the poor in Myanmar's central dry zone. In 2001 Pact's microfinance clients approached Pact with concerns about the lack of financial support to meet health-related needs. In response Pact developed the Partnership for Primary Health Care (PPHC) project. The rationale for PPHC was that while improvements in income are generally linked to economic conditions for improved health, the converse is equally true. Without a foundation of health, income-generating activities become less viable. PPHC was initiated as a service to Pact's microfinance clients in March of 2001 and addressed barriers to improved health through a mix of financial support services and health education. In 2003, building on the positive experiences of PPHC, Pact expanded the concept to 364 villages in four townships through the Partnership for Primary Health Care Services (PPHCS) project. PPHCS emphasizes community empowerment as a means of promoting more committed and, therefore, more sustainable community responses to health promotion and disease prevention. Through its activities with rural villages, Pact seeks to establish environments in which:
Pact's approachA Community Health and Development (CHD) approach provides the cornerstone of our interventions. This approach involves a three-day community workshop that attempts to address the behavioral determinants (attitudes, commitments and perceptions) that impact sustainable change in health at the community level. The agenda is nonprescriptive and enables the community to explore the health situation in their village, analyzing the nature of diseases they are burdened with and developing action plans to address priority concerns. Plans can vary widely from describing steps that will result in improved latrine construction, to community-led HIV/AIDS education for self-identified vulnerable groups, or development of procedures to ensure that people on directly observed treatment short courses (DOTs) get their treatments. The approach acknowledges that emphases on health education alone are typically insufficient to motivate changes in behavior in support of improved health. Commitment to act is more likely to result from community self-analysis of their health concerns and self-development of appropriate responses to them.Information, education and communication (IEC) activities employ simple participatory story telling tools that require little input from workshop facilitators. Self-discovery of environmental and health linkages are emphasized over the technical soundness of participant knowledge. However, the knowledge must be sufficient to initiate appropriate action. By putting health cause and effect relationships into concrete terms and making public statements about these relationships, the program builds individual and group commitment to acting on the knowledge. In effect the communities themselves become their own health educators and change advocates. Prevention will not eliminate disease. Pact's approach empowers communities to have knowledge of and access to basic treatments within their own communities. Village Pharmacy Depots, managed by Village Health Volunteers and supervised by local self-defined community organizations, are an essential service that allows local access to preventative and curative nonprescriptive drugs and supplies. Where this is insufficient individuals are encouraged to access government health system services. Loans from community-generated Village Health Funds, with matching grants from Pact, help those who are too ill to overcome the obstacles of poverty and distance to seek appropriate treatments. The Village Health Fund has a social function, not designed to specifically benefit individuals, but rather the health of the community at large. One person benefiting from the fund is a benefit to the community as a whole, particularly when treatments made available through the fund help prevent disease transmission. Community management of such a fund is important, as these experiences inspire communities to conceive other community-driven development initiatives. One such example was to use the VHF mechanism to generate funding for replacement of a community water supply engine. The sustainable community management of these institutions and change initiatives are primarily founded on community commitment to maintain them. The approach's community-driven nature helps to build this. Communities design their own specific management systems, sometimes relying on existing organizations within the community, other time creating new ones. Pact helps these community organizations develop their technical, financial and organizational capacity through targeted support meeting the needs of each individual community. Pact and employed Village Health Promoters, visit project communities regularly to help assess and deliver capacity building services while more formal finance and management training activities supplement this. Interim results
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