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Rwanda has made remarkable improvements in the health status of its population.

Rwanda's progress in health: Leadership, performance and health insurance

Four years of civil war and genocide in Rwanda took the lives of almost 1 million people, leaving the country in a state of almost total collapse in 1994. While 60% of the population still lives below the poverty line, in only 16 years the country has made remarkable improvements on key health indicators, including: infant and child mortality; immunisation coverage; use of family planning; malaria mortality and morbidity; and HIV prevalence.

Progress can be attributed to ambitious reforms in the health sector, including the introduction of community health insurance and boosting of services through staff incentives and performance-based financing (PBF) schemes. Strong leadership, vision and commitment have also been key. Participatory decentralisation, including extensive use and formalisation of community health workers (CHWs), has brought services closer to communities and empowered them to participate in their own development. Meanwhile, effectively coordinated donor assistance has been instrumental in achieving such remarkable outcomes in the Rwandan health sector. 

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Key Messages

  1. Rwanda, a very low-income country, has made significant progress in increasing the quality and quantity of health services and in improving health status, through an effective national but decentralised public health programme.
  2. Community health insurance, improved service quality through performance-based financing (PBF), decentralisation and the extension of community-based services have all been critical to improving Rwanda's health status. Government's ability to develop and scale up based on participatory consultation and grassroots evidence has also facilitated improvements. 
  3. Strong leadership, vision and accountability mechanisms at all levels are vital to successful health sector reforms. Additionally, effective coordination of donor funding and true government-donor partnership have brought ideas and good practices into the country and ensured that aid is used effectively and aligned with national priorities.