OA
May 22, 2022
Awesome course. My origin is finance but this course took me behind the scenes of the health care system for populatiins just as I wanted. Much appreciated.butinanceE
NK
Sep 2, 2018
This a very interesting course highlighting key components in order effectively organize to tackle issues facing health systems at large . I highly recommend it
By Ekundayo A A
•Jan 22, 2019
Very excellent course, comprehensive and easy to follow. I am just not a big fan of the peer-reviewed assignment being compulsory.
Thank you, Madam Brieger for your work. Thank you John Hopkins and Coursera
By Lucile L
•Apr 17, 2020
Very interesting and broad course with also clear examples
Sometimes I wished less repetition
Some technical problems still there (slides/speech matching) but not too impairing for the learning process
By Michael D
•Feb 9, 2021
I feel the structure was set up very well, and it did flow. I am hoping to never hear the word guinea worm ever again though. Looking forward to the next course.
By Zuzana H
•Nov 1, 2019
This course provided useful overview. Though slides in presentations in Module 2 were in wrong order. Otherwise, I would recommend the course.
By Fredrik H
•Dec 30, 2019
Sadly the PowerPoint in Module 2 (part of week 2) is totally messed up. However, great course with good examples
By Marc S O
•Dec 21, 2018
A very useful and practical course. It delivers practical examples in real life situations.
By Maria L P
•May 30, 2020
Some weeks are disproportionately heavy with regards to other. Very interesting.
By Hafiz M W
•May 18, 2020
It is really good course.
By Gil C
•Oct 14, 2019
Very good.
By Nonna T
•Nov 6, 2020
I am grateful to the course organizers for putting it out there.
As a general introduction, the course needs a better explanation of how its different parts come together. For instance, Part 1 sessions on organisations and change does not link up with the last few sessions which introduce Health Systems. The presentation of the sessions on organisations and change is overloaded with detailed personal experiences of the lecturer, there are no references to where the models come from, and the models themselves don’t seem thought through.
Week 2 is much better than Week 1. I think the view of the PHC is obsolete, same as the WHO’s view of it. Nowhere in the world does PHC fulfill all the roles expected of it, including education and social mobilization, or “fixing the local markets” example. With the amount of money allocated to PHC in M/LICs it’s not realistic to expect all that. I did like the HS building blocks explained on the example of the malaria program, I found malaria more relatable than the example in Week 1. The “last mile” session is informative and the one on private vendors is interesting, although a bit repetitive, and there’s a mismatch between the voice-over and the slides in a number of videos. What I really liked in Week 2 is the matrix of the Global Fund CSS blocks and the community systems.
Week 3 seems an improvement in setting the stage and good overview at the start of the lecture covering the main elements. I do not understand why, while the course is on health systems, the practical assignment is not on health systems, but on organizational change.
Week 4 material on policy making makes an important highlight of the responsibility of policy administrators, and I liked the comparison between the different policy formation models. The lecturer is spot on about the detrimental impact of WTO/patents. The lecturer’s accounts of advocacy implementation are a clear value-add.
Generally I think it would be best to have a separate course on organizational change and on health systems/community systems. I do not think the health systems and the organizational change parts of this course blended well together.
Some detailed observations are: the course could benefit from mentioning sources/providing reference links. Also it would be great if there was a possibility to fast-forward/rewind by 10 seconds, like on Netflix 😊 I personally find many of the illustrations/pictures used to be a bit dated, and more diversity in the images would be welcome. The image on slide 10 of Week 2 struck me, it’s about nutrition, on the image there are two smiling men who are at a table with food in front of them, and there is a seemingly sidelined woman holding a child who sits at the edge. It would be good to mention something about the role of gender or intra-family food security! I think sometimes the lecturer goes in too much details on the clinical aspects of different tropical diseases. I do appreciate the time, effort and resources that were put to produce this course, with a few changes the course can improve.
By Julian, K
•Feb 21, 2020
The videos were fairly long and extremely detailed albeit it required complete and undivided attention. If you don't do very well when it comes to watching long lectures, it's better to start now because it's going to be worth it. Thanks!
By Óscar D O Á
•Sep 9, 2020
The information is very useful but, some slides of the videos are not synchronize with the audio and make difficult to understand the classes.
By Maria E
•Jun 14, 2018
The information provided was very useful, but the method (videos/lectures) were too monotonous.
By Araditta S
•Jul 30, 2024
a little dry and hard to follow
By Varun R N
•May 24, 2020
The content organization is very random and one component does not flow into the other.
The approach to teaching is very boring- the instructor is simply reading out information without engagement.
The good part about the course is the case study approach to teaching which makes it easier to apply in a practical setting.
By Dana D
•Feb 25, 2023
It is inconvenient that I must wait until others would submit their works or check my assignment. I cannot get my certificate on time because of that.
By Jean M V N
•Nov 16, 2020
Very structured and interesting course