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Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2012

Aid effectiveness from Rome to Busan: some progress but lacking bottom-up approaches or behaviour changes.

Jessica Martini; Roch Mongo; Hyppolite Kalambay; Anne Fromont; Nathalie Ribesse; Bruno Dujardin

The Busan partnership adopted at the 4th High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness at the end of last year is a significant step forward towards the improvement of aid quality and the promotion of development. In particular, the inclusiveness achieved in Busan and the shift in discourse from ‘aid effectiveness’ to ‘development effectiveness’ are emblematic. However, key challenges still remain. Firstly, decision‐making should be more bottom‐up, finding ways to take into account the populations’ needs and experiences and to enhance self‐learning dynamics during the policy process. Today, it is particularly necessary to define what ‘development’ means at country level, according to the aspirations of particular categories of people and meeting operational and local expectations. Secondly, changes in language should be followed by a real change in mindset. Development stakeholders should further adapt their procedures to the reality of complex systems in which development interventions are being dealt with.


Global Health Promotion | 2017

Methodological approach and tools for systems thinking in health systems research: technical assistants’ support of health administration reform in the Democratic Republic of Congo as an application:

Nathalie Ribesse; Paul Bossyns; Bruno Marchal; Hermès Karemere; Christopher J. Burman; Jean Macq

In the field of development cooperation, interest in systems thinking and complex systems theories as a methodological approach is increasingly recognised. And so it is in health systems research, which informs health development aid interventions. However, practical applications remain scarce to date. The objective of this article is to contribute to the body of knowledge by presenting the tools inspired by systems thinking and complexity theories and methodological lessons learned from their application. These tools were used in a case study. Detailed results of this study are in process for publication in additional articles. Applying a complexity ‘lens’, the subject of the case study is the role of long-term international technical assistance in supporting health administration reform at the provincial level in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The Methods section presents the guiding principles of systems thinking and complex systems, their relevance and implication for the subject under study, and the existing tools associated with those theories which inspired us in the design of the data collection and analysis process. The tools and their application processes are presented in the results section, and followed in the discussion section by the critical analysis of their innovative potential and emergent challenges. The overall methodology provides a coherent whole, each tool bringing a different and complementary perspective on the system.


Conflict and Health | 2015

Analyzing Katana referral hospital as a complex adaptive system: agents, interactions and adaptation to a changing environment

Hermès Karemere; Nathalie Ribesse; Bruno Marchal; Jean Macq

This study deals with the adaptation of Katana referral hospital in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in a changing environment that is affected for more than a decade by intermittent armed conflicts. His objective is to generate theoretical proposals for addressing differently the analysis of hospitals governance in the aims to assess their performance and how to improve that performance. The methodology applied approach uses a case study using mixed methods ( qualitative and quantitative) for data collection. It uses (1) hospital data to measure the output of hospitals, (2) literature review to identify among others, events and interventions recorded in the history of hospital during the study period and (3) information from individual interviews to validate the interpretation of the results of the previous two sources of data and understand the responsiveness of management team referral hospital during times of change. The study brings four theoretical propositions: (1) Interaction between key agents is a positive force driving adaptation if the actors share a same vision, (2) The strength of the interaction between agents is largely based on the nature of institutional arrangements, which in turn are shaped by the actors themselves, (3) The owner and the management team play a decisive role in the implementation of effective institutional arrangements and establishment of positive interactions between agents, (4) The analysis of recipient population’s perception of health services provided allow to better tailor and adapt the health services offer to the population’s needs and expectations. Research shows that it isn’t enough just to provide support (financial and technical), to manage a hospital for operate and adapt to a changing environment but must still animate, considering that it is a complex adaptive system and that this animation is nothing other than the induction of a positive interaction between agents.


Médecine et Santé Tropicales | 2013

Gouvernance des hôpitaux de référence en République démocratique du Congo : synthèse critique interprétative de la littérature

Hermès Karemere; J.B. Kahindo; Nathalie Ribesse; Jean Macq

INTRODUCTION Because hospitals are complex enterprises requiring adaptive systems, it is appropriate to apply the theory and terminology of governance or even better adaptive governance to the interpretation of their management. This study focused on understanding hospital governance in Logo, Bunia, and Katana, three hospitals in two regions of the eastern DRC, which has been characterized by intermittent armed conflict since 1996. In such a context of war and continuous insecurity, how can governance be interpreted for hospitals required to adapt to a constantly changing environment to be able to continue to provide health care? METHODOLOGY A critical interpretive synthesis of the literature, identified by searching for keywords related to governance. RESULTS The concepts of governance, adaptive governance, performance, leadership, and complex adaptive system concepts are defined. The interpretation of the concepts helps us to better understand (1) the hospital as a complex adaptive system, (2) the governance of tertiary referral hospitals, (3) analysis of hospital performance, and (4) leadership for good governance of these hospitals. DISCUSSION The interpretation of these concepts raises several questions about their application to the eastern DRC. Conclusion. This critical interpretive synthesis opens the door to a new way of exploring tertiary hospitals and their governance in the eastern DRC.


The Pan African medical journal | 2015

Referral hospitals in the Democratic Republic of Congo as complex adaptive systems: similar program, different dynamics.

Hermès Karemere; Nathalie Ribesse; Jean-Bosco Kahindo; Jean Macq

Introduction In many African countries, first referral hospitals received little attention from development agencies until recently. We report the evolution of two of them in an unstable region like Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo when receiving the support from development aid program. Specifically, we aimed at studying how actors’ network and institutional framework evolved over time and what could matter the most when looking at their performance in such an environment. Methods We performed two cases studies between 2006 and 2010. We used multiple sources of data: reports to document events; health information system for hospital services production, and “key-informants” interviews to interpret the relation between interventions and services production. Our analysis was inspired from complex adaptive system theory. It started from the analysis of events implementation, to explore interaction process between the main agents in each hospital, and the consequence it could have on hospital health services production. This led to the development of new theoretical propositions. Results Two events implemented in the frame of the development aid program were identified by most of the key-informants interviewed as having the greatest impact on hospital performance: the development of a hospital plan and the performance based financing. They resulted in contrasting interaction process between the main agents between the two hospitals. Two groups of services production were reviewed: consultation at outpatient department and admissions, and surgery. The evolution of both groups of services production were different between both hospitals. Conclusion By studying two first referral hospitals through the lens of a Complex Adaptive System, their performance in a context of development aid takes a different meaning. Success is not only measured through increased hospital production but through meaningful process of hospital agents’” network adaptation. Expected process is not necessarily a change; strengthened equilibrium and existing institutional arrangement may be a preferable result. Much more attention should be given in future international aid to the proper understanding of the hospital adaptation capacities.


Journal of Clinical Nursing | 2010

Designing a protocol for innovative projects of care and support targeting community dwelling frail elderly

Thérèse Van Durme; Sophie Cès; Nathalie Ribesse; William D'Hoore; Micheline Gobert; Caroline Jeanmart; Christian Swine; Roy Remmen; Anja Declercq; Jean Macq


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2011

Technical assistance for health system strengthening in fragile state: learning from experiences through systemic approach

Nathalie Ribesse; Alain Iyeti; Véronique Zinnen; Béatrice Mukaji Mwenyi; Jean Macq


Santé publique (Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France) | 2015

[Change management: An analysis of actors; perceptions about technical assistance in the Democratic Republic of Congo].

Nathalie Ribesse; Alain Iyeti; Jean Macq


Sante Publique | 2015

Accompagnement du changement : une analyse de représentations d’acteurs sur l’assistance technique en République Démocratique du Congo

Nathalie Ribesse; Alain Iyeti; Jean Macq


Archive | 2015

Comprendre l'accompagnement du changement dans les interventions d'assistance technique long-terme en appui à l'administration de la santé : cas de l'appui à la mise en œuvre de la stratégie de renforcement du système de santé au niveau provincial en République Démocratique du Congo

Nathalie Ribesse

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Jean Macq

Université catholique de Louvain

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Hermès Karemere

The Catholic University of America

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Bruno Dujardin

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Jessica Martini

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Anne Fromont

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Bruno Marchal

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Christian Swine

Université catholique de Louvain

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Thérèse Van Durme

Université catholique de Louvain

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Véronique Zinnen

Université catholique de Louvain

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