Health Promotion Policy and Regulations-1
Health Promotion Policy and Regulations-1
Health Promotion Policy and Regulations-1
Policy development
Policy: the law, role, legislation or set of guidelines or procedures or norms from the higher level
of authority to guide the cause of action.
: is also a decision making framework of course of action to achieve a desired effect for a change.
Police maker: the member of government department, legislature or other organization
responsible for policy change.
Policy making; the cause of action dealing with a problem or matter of concern
Policy can:
a) Be broad and vision able
b) Set direction
c) Express standards, behaviors and expectation to guide actions
d) Be a concept of a stated position of intent outcomes
e) Be statement of principle
Policies are distinct from procedures and guidelines which are operational instruments or
process for applying policy decision.
It is a document that aims to enable health communication practitioners develop effective programs
through provision of guidelines on health communication planning, implementation, monitoring
and evaluation. The following outcomes are expected to be achieved;
The Kenya Health Policy framework, 2014–2030 gives directions to ensure significant
improvement in overall status of health in Kenya in line with the Constitution of Kenya 2010, the
country’s long-term development agenda, Vision 2030 and global commitments. It demonstrates
the health sector’s commitment, under the government’s stewardship, to ensuring that the country
attains the highest possible standards of health in a manner responsive to the needs of the
population.
In order to meet these objectives, the Kenya Health Policy 2014- 2030 framework relies on eight
policy orientations as follows:
a) Organization of Service Delivery: Organizational arrangements required for delivery of
services;
b) Health Leadership and Governance: Oversight required for delivery of services
c) Health Workforce: Human resources required for provision of services
d) Health Financing: Financial arrangements required for provision of services
e) Health Products and Technologies: Essential medicines, medical supplies, vaccines,
health technologies, and public health commodities
f) Health Information: Systems for generation, collation, analysis, dissemination, and
utilization of health-related information required for provision of services
g) Health Infrastructure: Physical infrastructure, equipment, transport, and information
communication technology (ICT) needed for provision of services; and
h) Research and Development: Creation of a culture in which research plays a significant
role in guiding policy formulation and action to improve the health and development of the
people of Kenya. The effects of investments in these eight orientations will be measured
through attainment of desired health outputs; these are improved access, quality of care,
and demand for services.
Kenya Vision 2030 is the long-term development blueprint for the country and is motivated by
a collective aspiration for a better society by the year 2030. The aim of Kenya Vision 2030 is
to create “a globally competitive and prosperous country with a high quality of life by 2030”.
It aims to transform Kenya into “a newly-industrializing, middle income country providing a
high quality of life to all its citizens in a clean and secure environment".
The Vision 2030 strategy focuses on reforms and development across 10 key sectors:
Infrastructure.
Science, Technology and Innovation.
Public Sector Reforms.
Tourism.
Agriculture.
Trade.
Manufacturing.
BPO (Business Process Outsourcing) & ICT (Information Communication & Technology).
Financial Services.
Education & Training.
It has got four pillars:
1. Economic
This aims at improving the prosperity of all Kenyans through an economic development
programme, covering all the regions of Kenya
2. Social
Through this strategy, Kenya aims to build a just and cohesive society with social equity in a clean
and secure environment
3. Political
This aims to realise a democratic political system founded on issue-based politics that respects the
rule of law, and protects the rights and freedoms of every individual in Kenyan society. It hopes
to transform Kenya into a state in which equality is entrenched, irrespective of one’s race, ethnicity,
religion, gender or socio-economic status; a nation that respects and harnesses the diversity of its
peoples’ values, traditions and aspirations for the benefit of all its citizens.
4. Economic and Macro pillar
In September 2015, the General Assembly adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development that includes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Building on the
principle of “leaving no one behind”, the new Agenda emphasizes a holistic approach to
achieving sustainable development for all.
The 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs) to transform our world:
1. No Poverty
2. Zero Hunger
3. Good Health and Well-being
4. Quality Education
5. Gender Equality
6. Clean Water and Sanitation
7. Affordable and Clean Energy
8. Decent Work and Economic Growth
9. Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
10. Reduced Inequality
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
12. Responsible Consumption and Production
13. Climate Action
14. Life Below Water
15. Life on Land
16. Peace and Justice Strong Institutions
International health promotion regulations
Operational guidelines for health promotion
The Major HP Actions;
Creating Environments that Support Health; For health to be created, improved or
maintained, supportive conditions must exist. Health development is usually assumed to be the
business of health systems, but there is increasing evidence that it is made easier or possible
primarily through the creation or improvement of various social, economic and physical
conditions and circumstances. HP practitioners therefore need to work with their counterparts in
sectors such as agriculture, transport, law enforcement, finance, gender, and education to
promote production of safer and healthier goods and services, provision of healthier public and
private services, as well as leaner, more user -friendly environments.
Strengthening community actions;
The majority of HP actions are effective when relevant communities are enabled to participate in
priority-setting, decision-making, strategy-making, and implementation as well as evaluation of
interventions. Health promoters serve as a brokers and catalysts whose role is to enhance
awareness about the need for specific health actions and to mobilize self-help and collaboration
among community members. They also facilitate acquisition of information about health
determinants and how to tackle them, provision of learning opportunities for health, and advise on
how to obtain resources for required interventions.
Developing and Applying Health Policy; A healthy public policy incorporates very broad
visions of health and goes beyond the health care system and its traditional hospital and
physician-based care. It is concerned with the role of government and the public sector in
creating the conditions that promote and support health.
Examples include school health policy, alcohol policy, etc. In general terms, policy is an
important tool that serves to direct the ways individuals and groups act to improve health. The
HP practitioner supports, coordinates, initiates, and motivates the mechanisms and players
needed to develop and implement a healthy policy.
Working with Health and Related Services to Make Them More People-Friendly; Health
services are important in the attempt to promote health. Sadly, most conventional and
especially government services are structured to provide mainly curative services and some
preventive interventions such as vaccinations and family planning. It is for this reason, therefore,
that HP works closely with health services to ensure that all health actions have a health-promoting
element. There is need for sensitivity and response to the needs of individuals and communities.
Health care providers need reorientation and retraining so as to acquire a broader mindset and new
skills with which to support health-promoting activities in the course of their normal service
delivery. HP brokers the relationship between health services and communities so that the
necessary reorientations are carried out. The ideal situation is a formal partnership between
communities or groups and service delivery.