Publication: A conceptual and analytical approach to comparative analysis of country case studies: HIV and TB control programmes and health systems integration
Issued Date
2010-01-01
Resource Type
ISSN
14602237
02681080
02681080
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-79952278757
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Health Policy and Planning. Vol.25, (2010), i21-i31
Suggested Citation
Richard Coker, Julie Balen, Sandra Mounier-Jack, Altynay Shigayeva, Jeffrey V. Lazarus, James W. Rudge, Neepa Naik, Rifat Atun A conceptual and analytical approach to comparative analysis of country case studies: HIV and TB control programmes and health systems integration. Health Policy and Planning. Vol.25, (2010), i21-i31. doi:10.1093/heapol/czq054 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/29872
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Title
A conceptual and analytical approach to comparative analysis of country case studies: HIV and TB control programmes and health systems integration
Abstract
© The Author 2010; all rights reserved. Attempts to comparatively analyse large-scale communicable disease control programmes have, for the most part, neglected the wider health system contexts within which the programmes lie. In addition, many evaluations of the integration of vertical disease control programmes into health systems have focused on single case studies or on a limited number of cases, or, when large numbers of cases were drawn upon, have been presented as a compendium of monographs rather than a systematic cross-national comparison. One reason for this may be that appropriate theories and tools for comparative health systems analysis are rare and difficult to formulate. In this paper we propose a conceptual framework and an analytical methodology which might be used to comparatively analyse a series of case studies that explore health systems, communicable diseases programmes and concepts of integration in order to make systematic comparisons to offer novel insights, to test new theories and to offer new hypotheses. We illustrate through a preliminary analysis how this framework can be applied to compare the impact of health systems integration and HIV and TB programmes in four countries in South-East Asia that were the subject of cases studies.