The GFF’s Catalytic Role
The GFF Catalytic Role provides details on the GFF support for Bangladesh’s Reproductive, Maternal, Neonatal, Child, and Adolescent Health and Nutrition (RMNCAH-N) agenda. Details on past and ongoing work are provided along with plans for future support. The GFF Catalytic Role focuses on support provided in the areas of the Investment Case (IC), Health Financing and systems reforms, the country platform, partner alignment, and data use for decision-making.
- Developing a costed and prioritized investment case: Together with other partners, the GFF is cofinancing the World Bank’s Health Sector Support Project (HSSP), which includes an essential services package and focuses on lagging regions, such as Sylhet and Chittagong, to improve equity.
- Prioritizing and implementing health financing and systems reforms: The GFF is helping to boost efficiency in procurement and budget planning. By helping to strengthen fiduciary systems and promoting the use of disbursement-linked indicators, the GFF has contributed to improved budget planning, execution, and monitoring as well as increased budget allocation and execution for frontline service delivery.
- Strengthening the country platform and convening financial and technical partners at country level: In cooperation with the World Bank and other partners, the GFF is supporting the sector-wide approach platform — which coordinates analytical, technical, and financial support to the government — including monitoring project results. The GFF is also contributing to stronger partner alignment on health financing reforms and domestic resource mobilization. In addition, to help expand access to quality health care, the GFF supported initial dialogue to further develop private-public collaboration in service delivery. GFF is adding value in strengthening emerging private sector engagement towards collaboration in the delivery of health services. since many health providers are private, both NGOs and private for profit. The GFF is working with the government on private sector assessment to identify opportunities and challenges and conducted capacity assessment of MOHFW to engage private sector with clear recommendations for implementation.
- Prioritizing adolescent health through cross-sectoral interventions in health and education: To address adolescent pregnancy, keep girls in school, and increase access to adolescent and nutrition services in the Sylhet and Chittagong regions, the GFF is supporting implementation of the National Strategy for Adolescent Health, which aligns the health and education sectors in developing school-based programs. In addition, the GFF is supporting analytical work on identifying successful and impactful adolescent health (AH) programs in Bangladesh and their key elements of success.
- Private sector and analytical support: GFF is adding value in strengthening emerging private sector engagement towards collaboration in the delivery of health services. since many health providers are private, both NGOs and private for profit. The GFF is working with the government on private sector assessment to identify opportunities and challenges and conducted capacity assessment of MOHFW to engage private sector with clear recommendations for implementation. In addition, The GFF support to analytical works on Monitoring of Essential Health Services in times of covid-19 inform findings that are expected to provide useful information to help with the formulation of the 5th health sector program.
Core RMNCAH-N Impact Indicators
The 8 GFF core impact indicators reflect updates aligned with the in-country survey schedule which optimally occurs once every three to five years to determine population-based changes in important health and nutrition outcomes. These indicators are core to the GFF Logic Model, to reflect impact of aligned interventions over time. Collected by governments and development partners, these indicators are also used to monitor the Every Woman Every Child Initiative and the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for RMNCAH-N. The country survey data includes Demographic Health Surveys (DHS) and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS), which are funded by domestic resources as well as by the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, USAID and other multi- and bilateral organizations. The Covid-19 pandemic forced several countries to cancel or re-schedule plans for survey data collection these past two years.
The GFF highlights progress between the two most recent point estimates from population-based surveys approved by countries. The timing of the data points is dependent on when survey data are available, which introduces lags. In addition, it has been demonstrated that stillbirths tend to be under-reported in population based surveys1. For many of the indicators highlighted in this table, annual estimates are produced through global processes. The globally produced estimates can be found through the following sites:
Core Health Financing Indicators
The six GFF core health financing indicators track changes to country budget and expenditures with a focus on health spending, to monitor the expected impact of increasing the total volume and value of funding allocated to health and nutrition. The GFF partnership supports financing reforms by engaging with ministries of finance and ministries of health to strengthen mobilization of domestic resources as well as allocative and technical efficiency. These indicators are tracked through country-specific data sources such as BOOST, NHA, and budget reports. Expenditure data are tracked through the Global Health Expenditure Database (GHED), for which data are available through the end of 2018. Through measurement of budgets and expenditures, the GFF partnership aims to accelerate the expansion of interventions that are high-impact, cost-effective, affordable, and feasible to accelerate progress on universal health coverage and in achieving SDG targets.
Survey and Estimated RMNCAH-N Coverage
The RMNCAH-N coverage data includes a standard set of 9 RMNCAH-N coverage indicators from available population-based surveys from 2010 to the most recent available survey. These indicators show progress towards key goals across maternal, child, and adolescent health and nutrition outcomes. Additional key nutrition-specific and/or education-specific coverage indicators are presented for countries where the GFF co-finances a nutrition-focused World Bank project or where education is a strong focus of the IC.
The RMNCAH-N coverage data are sourced from the most recent available population-based surveys. Data on immunization are presented from the WHO/UNICEF joint reporting process and recent population-based surveys.
Monitoring The Country-led Process
The GFF Logic Model highlights key elements of a GFF co-financed country-led process that contribute to the expected impact of improved RMNCAH-N outcomes over time. The GFF has developed a core set of indicators to monitor implementation of the GFF approach, considered as inputs and activities in the model, that emphasize prioritization and alignment to capitalize on efficiencies to improve transparency and accountability as well as health outcomes. Process monitoring includes tracking investment case development, country stakeholder engagement, health financing and the inclusion of gender and equity approaches.
Implementation Progress
The data in this section is provided for a selection of indicators from the Investment Case Results Framework, Health Financing priorities, and the World Bank Project as applicable. Please select indicators from the dropdown menu to view the data for each indicator. Where subnational data is available, the map will display subnational trends over time or the latest data available. Hovering over the map will display additional data for the select indicator. Clicking on a region will add it to the chart on the right. All data, including source information, may be downloaded by selecting the arrow to the right of the indicator dropdown menu.