Toward political economy of sustainable financing for immunization in the World Health Organization African Region through a systems thinking lens

•Government spending on immunization in the African Region is inadequate.•Politics influences the decision to allocate more resources to immunization.•Understanding the political economy of immunization financing is critical.•Systems thinking lens should be incorporated in political economy analysis...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of infectious diseases 2023-11, Vol.136, p.158-161
Hauptverfasser: Adamu, Abdu A, Essoh, Téné-Alima, Jalo, Rabiu I, Wiysonge, Charles S
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Government spending on immunization in the African Region is inadequate.•Politics influences the decision to allocate more resources to immunization.•Understanding the political economy of immunization financing is critical.•Systems thinking lens should be incorporated in political economy analysis. There is an urgent need for countries in Africa to allocate more domestic financial resources to immunization so that national immunization programmes can attain self-reliance in line with World Health Organization's Immunization Agenda 2030. However, resource allocation is fundamentally a political process because other competing needs exist. Political economy analysis (PEA) can guide policy influencers in their engagement with decision makers to tilt their interest in support of sustainable immunization financing. PEA can provide a deeper understanding of the potential constraints and facilitators of a policy direction to expand the fiscal space for immunization using domestic resources within the context of a country's socioeconomic and political realities. To further advance the usefulness of PEA for decision making, a systems thinking lens should be applied to account for the inherent complexity of the social systems involved in resource allocation and implementation. Several methods and tools of systems thinking already exist and can be employed. Causal loop diagrams, when incorporated in a PEA of sustainable financing for immunization can aid the identification of feedback loops which can be used as leverage points for intervention.
ISSN:1201-9712
1878-3511
DOI:10.1016/j.ijid.2023.09.017