AI Article Synopsis

  • Most health capacity-building efforts prioritize medical skills over developing hospital managers, which is crucial for enhancing healthcare delivery.
  • In response to identified management weaknesses, a collaborative Master of Hospital Administration (MHA) program was established in Ethiopia, combining efforts from multiple educational and health organizations to train hospital leaders.
  • The MHA program has successfully enrolled and educated hospital executives, highlighting key lessons about balancing practical skill training with strategic thinking, adapting to policy changes, addressing resource limitations, and ensuring knowledge transfer for sustainable development.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: QUALITY ISSUE: The vast majority of health system capacity-building efforts have focused on enhancing medical and public health skills; less attention has been directed at developing hospital managers despite their central role in improving the functioning and quality of health-care systems. Initial ASSESSMENT AND CHOICE OF INTERVENTION: Initial assessment of hospital management systems demonstrated weak functioning in several management areas. In response, we developed with the Ethiopian Ministry of Health (MoH) a novel Master of Hospital Administration (MHA) program, reflecting a collaborative effort of the MoH, the Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative, Jimma University and Yale University. The MHA is a 2-year executive style educational program to develop a new cadre of hospital leaders, comprising 5% classroom learning and 85% executive practice.

Implementation: The MHA has been implemented with 55 hospital leaders in the position of chief executive officer within the MoH, with courses taught in collaboration by faculty of the North and the South universities.

Evaluation And Lessons Learned: The program has enrolled two cohorts of hospital leaders and is working in more than half of the government hospitals in Ethiopia. Lessons learned include the need to: (i) balance education in applied, technical skills with more abstract thinking and problem solving, (ii) recognize the interplay between management education and policy reform, (iii) remain flexible as policy changes have direct impact on the project, (iv) be realistic about resource constraints in low-income settings, particularly information technology limitations, and (v) manage the transfer of knowledge for longer term sustainability.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2803009PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzp051DOI Listing

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