Health system resilience during COVID-19 understanding SRH service adaptation in North Kivu
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Date
2022-06-06
Citation
Ho, L.S., Bertone, M.P., Mansour, W., Masaka, C. and Kakesa, J. (2022) ‘Health system resilience during COVID-19 understanding SRH service adaptation in North Kivu’, Reproductive Health, 19(1), p. 135. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-022-01443-5.
Abstract
Background: There is often collateral damage to health systems during epidemics, afecting women and girls the
most, with reduced access to non-outbreak related services, particularly in humanitarian settings. This rapid case
study examines sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services in the Democratic Republic of the Congo when the
COVID-19 hit, towards the end of an Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak, and in a context of protracted insecurity.
Methods: This study draws on quantitative analysis of routine data from four health zones, a document review of
policies and protocols, and 13 key-informant interviews with staf from the Ministry of Public Health, United Nations
agencies, international and national non-governmental organizations, and civil society organizations.
Results: Utilization of SRH services decreased initially but recovered by August 2020. Signifcant fuctuations
remained across areas, due to the end of free care once Ebola funding ceased, insecurity, number of COVID-19 cases,
and funding levels. The response to COVID-19 was top-down, focused on infection and prevention control measures,
with a lack of funding, technical expertise and overall momentum that characterized the EVD response. Communities
and civil society did not play an active role for the planning of the COVID-19 response. While health zone and facility
staf showed resilience, developing adaptations to maintain SRH provision, these adaptations were short-lived and
inconsistent without external support and funding.
Conclusion: The EVD outbreak was an opportunity for health system strengthening that was not sustained during
COVID-19. This had consequences for access to SRH services, with limited-resources available and deprioritization of
SRH.