Scaling Up Health Interventions
Scaling Up is the deliberate expansion of successful health interventions from pilot sites to entire health systems, regions, or countries. Formalized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Simmons et al. (2007), scaling up is distinct from simple dissemination; it requires systematic planning, financial modeling, capacity building, and policy alignment to ensure interventions work at scale. A pilot that succeeds brilliantly with champion leadership, dedicated funding, and motivated staff may fail when scaled to routine settings with limited resources. Scaling Up frameworks help practitioners anticipate and overcome these challenges.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Simmons, R., Fajans, P., & Ghiron, L. (Eds.). (2007). Scaling Up Health Service Delivery: From Pilot Innovations to Policies and Programmes. World Health Organization, Geneva. · URL
- Yamey, G. (2011). Scaling up global health interventions: A call for papers. The Lancet, 378(9802), e40-e41. · URL
- World Health Organization. (2008). Scaling Up Health Service Delivery: From Pilot Innovations to Policies and Programmes. WHO, Geneva. · URL
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