2019
DOI: 10.35942/ijcab.v3iii.9
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Effects of Devolution on Maternal Health Care: The Case of Level Four Hospitals in Nairobi City County, Kenya

Abstract: Maternal healthcare is an integral part of the Millennium development goals. However, most developing countries have been experimenting with different types of interventions to increase access and utilization of maternal care services. Health care devolution was greeted with great anticipation in Kenya as a means of bringing services closer to the people. However, since the implementation of the recent devolution reforms, criticism has mounted, with evidence of corruption, poor management, late payment of coun… Show more

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“…This has posed imminent challenges by stakeholders reaching a consensus and communicating a clear agenda on how to improve functional technology and health systems governance to enhance healthcare services in Kenyan public hospitals [6]. Moreover, various studies have been carried out on the health systems governance in the context of enhancing health care service delivery [7,8,9] in their study on mobile technology and health systems governance reports that there is a general lack of understanding of the role of mobile technology on health systems governance and health care service delivery.This is further echoed by Mohamoud et al (2018) noted that there is a potential benefit of mobile technology on the health systems governance implementation in public hospitals and concludes that limited attempts have been made to ascertain reasons for the observed levels of adoption technology and therefore notes of inadequacies in strategies to promote health systems governance in Kenya [32]. It is due to this knowledge gap that the current study focused on assessing the moderating effect of mobile technology on the relationship between health systems governance and service delivery in national referral hospitals in Kenya.…”
Section: Statement Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has posed imminent challenges by stakeholders reaching a consensus and communicating a clear agenda on how to improve functional technology and health systems governance to enhance healthcare services in Kenyan public hospitals [6]. Moreover, various studies have been carried out on the health systems governance in the context of enhancing health care service delivery [7,8,9] in their study on mobile technology and health systems governance reports that there is a general lack of understanding of the role of mobile technology on health systems governance and health care service delivery.This is further echoed by Mohamoud et al (2018) noted that there is a potential benefit of mobile technology on the health systems governance implementation in public hospitals and concludes that limited attempts have been made to ascertain reasons for the observed levels of adoption technology and therefore notes of inadequacies in strategies to promote health systems governance in Kenya [32]. It is due to this knowledge gap that the current study focused on assessing the moderating effect of mobile technology on the relationship between health systems governance and service delivery in national referral hospitals in Kenya.…”
Section: Statement Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%