Financial management systems under decentralization and their effect on malaria control in Uganda
✍ Scribed by George W. Kivumbi; Florence Nangendo; Boniface Rutagira Ndyabahika
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 97 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0749-6753
- DOI
- 10.1002/hpm.773
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✦ Synopsis
A descriptive case study with multiple sites and a single level of analysis was carried out in four purposefully selected administrative districts of Uganda to investigate the effect of financial management systems under decentralization on malaria control. Data were primarily collected from 36 interviews with district managers, staff at health units and local leaders. A review of records and documents related to decentralization at the central and district level was also used to generate data for the study. We found that a long, tedious, and bureaucratic process combined with lack of knowledge in working with new financial systems by several actors characterized financial flow under decentralization. This affected the timely use of financial resources for malaria control in that there were funds in the system that could not be accessed for use. We were also told that sometimes these funds were returned to the central government because of non-use due to difficulties in accessing them and/or stringent conditions not to divert them to other uses. Our data showed that a cocktail of bureaucratic control systems, corruption and incompetence make the financial management system under decentralization counter-productive for malaria control. The main conclusion is that good governance through appropriate and efficient financial management systems is very important for effective malaria control under decentralization.