Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4197997 | Health Policy | 2011 | 8 Pages |
BackgroundThe public health systems of the post-Soviet states have evolved from the san-epid system, which dominated public health practice throughout the former Soviet Union. Since independence, reforms have taken different directions. This article provides a cross-country comparison of public health reform processes and contents in 10 post-Soviet states.MethodsThe study is descriptive and comparative, based on a literature review of the major health databases, the Health Systems in Transition (HiT) volumes and grey literature. Search terms included terms on public health, the san-epid services and organizational reforms in one or several post-Soviet states.ResultsPublic health reforms have varied greatly: some countries have preserved the san-epid structure, some have built structures in addition to the san-epid system, and others have set up a new public health infrastructure. Traditional “functions” of the former san-epid system, such as vaccination, are still more advanced, while health promotion and intersectoral collaboration are less developed.ConclusionCritical self-evaluation, implementation of performance measurement and rigorous external research will prove essential in identifying strengths and weaknesses of past reforms and learning for the future.