Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India
The authors study the impact of governance and administrative factors on communicable disease prevention in the Indian state of Karnataka using survey data from administrators, frontline workers, and elected local representatives. They identify a n...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2487592/governance-communicable-disease-control-services-case-study-lessons-india http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18143 |
id |
okr-10986-18143 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-181432021-04-23T14:03:41Z Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India Das Gupta, Monica Khaleghian, Peyvand Sarwal, Rakesh ADMINISTRATIVE CAPACITY ADMINISTRATIVE FRAMEWORK ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM ADULT MORTALITY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AUTHORITY BLINDNESS BUDGETARY ALLOCATIONS CADRES CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CENTRAL GOVERNMENTS CHILD DEVELOPMENT CITIES CITIZENS COLONIES CONSTITUTION CONTAGIOUS DISEASES CONTRACEPTIVES CORRUPTION DECENTRALIZATION DECISION MAKING DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES DISEASE CONTROL DISTRICTS DRAINAGE ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES EMBEZZLEMENT EPIDEMICS EXERCISES EXPENDITURE EXTENSION FAMILY PLANNING FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL FISCAL CONTROL GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES HEALTH ADMINISTRATION HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH POLICIES HEALTH POLICY HEALTH PROGRAMS HEALTH REGULATIONS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEMS HEALTH WORKERS HOSPITALS HOUSING HUMAN RESOURCE HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT HUMAN RESOURCES HYGIENE IMMUNIZATION INCOME INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATE INNOVATION INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS ISOLATION JUDICIARY LABORATORIES LACK OF AUTONOMY LAWS LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT LIFE EXPECTANCY LIVING CONDITIONS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MALARIA MANAGERIAL AUTONOMY MANAGERS MEDICAL EDUCATION MORTALITY MOTIVATION NATIONS NUTRITION PARTNERSHIP PESTS POLICY RESEARCH POLIO PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC AGENCIES PUBLIC FUNDS PUBLIC GOVERNANCE PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT PUBLIC SERVICE PUBLIC SERVICES QUALITATIVE RESEARCH QUARANTINE REPRESENTATIVES RESOURCE ALLOCATION SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE DELIVERY MECHANISMS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE STATE GOVERNMENT UNIVERSITIES WASTE WASTE DISPOSAL WATER SUPPLY WORKERS WORKING CONDITIONS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES COMMUNICABLE DISEASES PREVENTION CASE STUDIES GOVERNANCE SURVEY DATA ADMINISTRATIVE CONSTRAINTS SERVICE DELIVERY HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT DECENTRALIZATION COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH CARE HEALTH LEGISLATION REGULATORY FRAMEWORK DISEASE PREVENTION DISEASE CONTROL PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION HEALTH POLICY HEALTH REFORM WORKING CONDITIONS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES The authors study the impact of governance and administrative factors on communicable disease prevention in the Indian state of Karnataka using survey data from administrators, frontline workers, and elected local representatives. They identify a number of key constraints to the effective management of disease control in India, in misaligned incentives, and the institutional arrangements for service delivery. The authors discuss these under five headings: administrative issues; human resource management; horizontal coordination; decentralization, community involvement, and public accountability; and implementation of public health laws and regulations. They find that India's public health system is configured to be highly effective at top-down reactive work, such as bringing disease outbreaks under control, but not for the more routine collaborations required for proactive disease prevention. The authors conclude with policy recommendations that take into account the complexity of India's system of public administration and the need for simple reforms that can be easily implemented. 2014-05-01T21:41:36Z 2014-05-01T21:41:36Z 2003-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2487592/governance-communicable-disease-control-services-case-study-lessons-india http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18143 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 3100 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research South Asia India |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ADMINISTRATIVE CAPACITY ADMINISTRATIVE FRAMEWORK ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM ADULT MORTALITY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AUTHORITY BLINDNESS BUDGETARY ALLOCATIONS CADRES CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CENTRAL GOVERNMENTS CHILD DEVELOPMENT CITIES CITIZENS COLONIES CONSTITUTION CONTAGIOUS DISEASES CONTRACEPTIVES CORRUPTION DECENTRALIZATION DECISION MAKING DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES DISEASE CONTROL DISTRICTS DRAINAGE ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES EMBEZZLEMENT EPIDEMICS EXERCISES EXPENDITURE EXTENSION FAMILY PLANNING FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL FISCAL CONTROL GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES HEALTH ADMINISTRATION HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH POLICIES HEALTH POLICY HEALTH PROGRAMS HEALTH REGULATIONS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEMS HEALTH WORKERS HOSPITALS HOUSING HUMAN RESOURCE HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT HUMAN RESOURCES HYGIENE IMMUNIZATION INCOME INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATE INNOVATION INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS ISOLATION JUDICIARY LABORATORIES LACK OF AUTONOMY LAWS LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT LIFE EXPECTANCY LIVING CONDITIONS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MALARIA MANAGERIAL AUTONOMY MANAGERS MEDICAL EDUCATION MORTALITY MOTIVATION NATIONS NUTRITION PARTNERSHIP PESTS POLICY RESEARCH POLIO PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC AGENCIES PUBLIC FUNDS PUBLIC GOVERNANCE PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT PUBLIC SERVICE PUBLIC SERVICES QUALITATIVE RESEARCH QUARANTINE REPRESENTATIVES RESOURCE ALLOCATION SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE DELIVERY MECHANISMS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE STATE GOVERNMENT UNIVERSITIES WASTE WASTE DISPOSAL WATER SUPPLY WORKERS WORKING CONDITIONS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES COMMUNICABLE DISEASES PREVENTION CASE STUDIES GOVERNANCE SURVEY DATA ADMINISTRATIVE CONSTRAINTS SERVICE DELIVERY HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT DECENTRALIZATION COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH CARE HEALTH LEGISLATION REGULATORY FRAMEWORK DISEASE PREVENTION DISEASE CONTROL PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION HEALTH POLICY HEALTH REFORM WORKING CONDITIONS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES |
spellingShingle |
ADMINISTRATIVE CAPACITY ADMINISTRATIVE FRAMEWORK ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM ADULT MORTALITY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AUTHORITY BLINDNESS BUDGETARY ALLOCATIONS CADRES CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CENTRAL GOVERNMENTS CHILD DEVELOPMENT CITIES CITIZENS COLONIES CONSTITUTION CONTAGIOUS DISEASES CONTRACEPTIVES CORRUPTION DECENTRALIZATION DECISION MAKING DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES DISEASE CONTROL DISTRICTS DRAINAGE ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES EMBEZZLEMENT EPIDEMICS EXERCISES EXPENDITURE EXTENSION FAMILY PLANNING FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL FISCAL CONTROL GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES HEALTH ADMINISTRATION HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH POLICIES HEALTH POLICY HEALTH PROGRAMS HEALTH REGULATIONS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEMS HEALTH WORKERS HOSPITALS HOUSING HUMAN RESOURCE HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT HUMAN RESOURCES HYGIENE IMMUNIZATION INCOME INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATE INNOVATION INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS ISOLATION JUDICIARY LABORATORIES LACK OF AUTONOMY LAWS LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT LIFE EXPECTANCY LIVING CONDITIONS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MALARIA MANAGERIAL AUTONOMY MANAGERS MEDICAL EDUCATION MORTALITY MOTIVATION NATIONS NUTRITION PARTNERSHIP PESTS POLICY RESEARCH POLIO PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC AGENCIES PUBLIC FUNDS PUBLIC GOVERNANCE PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT PUBLIC SERVICE PUBLIC SERVICES QUALITATIVE RESEARCH QUARANTINE REPRESENTATIVES RESOURCE ALLOCATION SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE DELIVERY MECHANISMS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE STATE GOVERNMENT UNIVERSITIES WASTE WASTE DISPOSAL WATER SUPPLY WORKERS WORKING CONDITIONS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES COMMUNICABLE DISEASES PREVENTION CASE STUDIES GOVERNANCE SURVEY DATA ADMINISTRATIVE CONSTRAINTS SERVICE DELIVERY HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT DECENTRALIZATION COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH CARE HEALTH LEGISLATION REGULATORY FRAMEWORK DISEASE PREVENTION DISEASE CONTROL PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION HEALTH POLICY HEALTH REFORM WORKING CONDITIONS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES Das Gupta, Monica Khaleghian, Peyvand Sarwal, Rakesh Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India |
geographic_facet |
South Asia India |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 3100 |
description |
The authors study the impact of
governance and administrative factors on communicable
disease prevention in the Indian state of Karnataka using
survey data from administrators, frontline workers, and
elected local representatives. They identify a number of key
constraints to the effective management of disease control
in India, in misaligned incentives, and the institutional
arrangements for service delivery. The authors discuss these
under five headings: administrative issues; human resource
management; horizontal coordination; decentralization,
community involvement, and public accountability; and
implementation of public health laws and regulations. They
find that India's public health system is configured to
be highly effective at top-down reactive work, such as
bringing disease outbreaks under control, but not for the
more routine collaborations required for proactive disease
prevention. The authors conclude with policy recommendations
that take into account the complexity of India's system
of public administration and the need for simple reforms
that can be easily implemented. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |
author |
Das Gupta, Monica Khaleghian, Peyvand Sarwal, Rakesh |
author_facet |
Das Gupta, Monica Khaleghian, Peyvand Sarwal, Rakesh |
author_sort |
Das Gupta, Monica |
title |
Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India |
title_short |
Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India |
title_full |
Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India |
title_fullStr |
Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India |
title_full_unstemmed |
Governance of Communicable Disease Control Services : A Case Study and Lessons from India |
title_sort |
governance of communicable disease control services : a case study and lessons from india |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2487592/governance-communicable-disease-control-services-case-study-lessons-india http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18143 |
_version_ |
1764438976512393216 |