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Seeing the Forest for the Trees: A Set of Descriptive Case Studies Presented with the Networks of Care Framework.

Address MalataAndy Elizabeth Carmone
Published in: Health systems and reform (2021)
Durable solutions for daunting problems in global health can be elusive. The global health literature tends to present aggregated data and highlight clinical outcomes but fails to describe the systems that buttress the interventions. The common idiom about "missing the forest for the trees" is apropos: by focusing on individual examples, we may miss the bigger picture. How implementation of policies and innovations plays out on the front lines of service delivery often goes uncommunicated. The Networks of Care scoping study takes a different approach, looking at diverse programs to seek out common patterns. Using the four domains of the Networks of Care framework to structure descriptions of six operational programs reveals commonalities in their designs and shows the utility of the framework's components. The commonalities increase our conviction that the framework can be used as a practical approach to strengthen service-level health systems. The case studies are followed by a commentary about the potential synergy of Networks of Care with Universal Health Coverage efforts, to deliver on the core promises to increase access and quality of care for all, especially the persistently underserved. These case studies help define a practical toolkit to promote enduring positive changes, forging a path for the Networks of Care framework to move anecdotes of individual successes to health policy and broader implementation, enabling global health practitioners at all levels to keep the big picture in focus while working toward ensuring healthy lives and well-being for all.
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