4.3 Article

Improving Access to and Coverage of Rehabilitation Services through the Implementation of Rehabilitation in Primary Health Care: A Case Study from Chile

Journal

HEALTH SYSTEMS & REFORM
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/23288604.2023.2242114

Keywords

Delivery of health care; health services accessibility; integrated; primary health care; rehabilitation

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Chile successfully integrated rehabilitation into primary health care through the Comprehensive Rehabilitation in PHC Program, improving access, coverage, and equity. Strong governance, financial commitment, and evidence-based planning were the key to achieving this.
The demand for rehabilitation services (RS) is increasing worldwide, particularly in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs), where up to 50% of people currently don't have access to the RS they need. This case report describes how Chile integrated rehabilitation into primary health care (PHC) to improve access, coverage, and equity. The report draws on the first-hand experiences of two Ministry of Health (MoH) officials involved in transitioning from specialized to PHC-centered rehabilitation. The cornerstone of Chile's strategy is the Comprehensive Rehabilitation in PHC Program (RehabPHC), launched in 2007. It has three main service delivery strategies: Community Rehabilitation Rooms (CRRs), Integrative Rehabilitation Rooms (IRRs) linked to Family Health Centers (CESFAM), and Rural Rehabilitation Teams (RRTs) that provide mobile rehabilitation in remote areas. RehabPHC revolutionized the delivery, organization, and financing of rehabilitation. Rehabilitation coverage increased from 12 CRRs in 2007 to 307 in 2022, available in 52.6% of CESFAMs. Key to this progress was strong leadership and financial commitment from the MoH to ensure a sustainable, PHC-centered national rehabilitation system. Essential to planning was collecting and continuously monitoring data on rehabilitation needs and RehabPHC service indicators, which promoted evidence-based resource allocation. A dedicated policy was also critical, defining development pathways and coordination mechanisms for rehabilitation financing, advocacy, data collection, and monitoring. Chile's experience underscores the importance of strong governance, financial commitment, and evidence-based planning in integrating rehabilitation into PHC. As such, it provides a valuable blueprint for countries facing similar challenges.

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