Public-Private Partnership in Health Care and Its Impact on Health Outcomes: Evidence from Ruharo Mission Hospital in Uganda
Abstract
Background: Uganda’s government has embraced private provision of social services including health care. The
involvement of private providers is an indicator that the public facilities are not sufficient enough to meet the high
demands of the ever-increasing population. This has been done through partnership arrangements. This paper discusses
the impact of Public-Private Partnership (PPP) in health care outcomes of the local population and opportunities for
improving health outcomes, challenges facing private providers in a low income setting.
Methodology: Data were collected using qualitative methods in January 2017 through interview (using semi-structured
questions) at Ruharo Mission Hospital (RMH) administration, health workers, district health office and used a
structured questionnaire for patients/clients. This was a nascent study, with a sample size of 22 respondents. The
hospital has three departments; Organized Useful Rehabilitation Services (OURS), General Medical Services (GMS)
and Eye Department (ED). All the departments of the hospital were represented in this study.
Results: The hospital is a Church of Uganda project and runs a budget of 5 billion shillings ($ 1,351,351.4) annually,
had multiple sources of funding including PHC funding annually and that, health services were delivered adequately to
clients. Much as some services were accessed at no costs, other services like eye treatment were found expensive on the
side of clients. The hospital’s hybrid mode of delivering health services through outreaches and facility-based services
was cherished, however it had no ambulance and relied only on a hospital van.
Conclusions and Recommendations: Our study concluded that if private providers are supported under the partnership
arrangement, they can adequately deliver services to the clients and decongest the public facilities. We recommend that
the government devote funds to support the hospital through employing more sub-seconded staff, procuring medicines,
and ambulances to enable it to subsidize services especially eye treatment and other services not supported under the
partnership.
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