health ministry

Tatiana Andía

Ref Batch
G
Ref Batch Number
5
Country of Reform
Interviewers
Gordon LaForge
Name
Tatiana Andía
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this 2018 interview, Tatiana Andía, now a professor at the University of Los Andes in Bogota, discusses the challenges facing Colombia’s health sector, principles of bureaucratic reform, and her experience as part of the health ministry’s drug price regulation team, whose work triggered a high-stakes showdown with the global pharmaceutical industry that had dramatic, unintended implications for Colombia’s foreign policy. 

Profile

Tatiana Andía was an expert on the political economy of access to medicines conducting PhD dissertation research at the Colombian health ministry when the minister asked her to join a small, upstart team focused on regulating out-of-control pharmaceutical prices. Lowering the cost of drugs was crucial for ensuring the health care system’s financial sustainability, the ministry’s top priority for the sector. 

Building a Healthier Rwanda: Linking Social Priorities to the National Budget, 2011–2016

Author
Simon Engler
Country of Reform
Abstract

Rwanda’s public health system was among the many casualties of the country’s 1994 genocide. In the aftermath of the violence, health workers were in short supply, maternal and child mortality rates spiked, and infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDs and tuberculosis often went untreated. By 2011, Rwanda had made enormous progress in remedying the situation, but much more remained to be done. From 2011 to 2016, officials in the finance ministry and health ministry worked together to develop five-year plans for public health, translate their new priorities into annual budgets, and monitor spending so as to ensure progress toward national goals. They revised the budget calendar to improve the planning process, helped local authorities build medium-term public-health strategies, and refined the tools used for tracking spending in the health sector. They met or surpassed more than half of the top targets they set for 2015, cementing the gains Rwanda had made since 1994.

Simon Engler drafted this case study with the assistance of Louise Umutoni Bower, based on interviews conducted in Kigali, Rwanda in March, April and August 2018. Case published September 2018.

To view a short version of the case, please click here