Introduction: Governance Is the Backbone of Health System Performance
Across Africa, hospitals face chronic challenges: inconsistent service quality, low patient satisfaction, staff demotivation, and resource inefficiency. These issues are often blamed on funding gaps or infrastructure deficits, yet countries with similar limitations achieve better outcomes.
The difference is governance – the structures, systems, and leadership behaviours that determine how hospitals function daily.
Weak governance creates weak hospitals. Strong governance creates strong outcomes.
This article explores why Africa needs a new governance model and how such a model can transform healthcare performance without massive financial investment.
Why Traditional Governance Structures Fail in African Hospitals
- Overreliance on hierarchy rather than systems
Many hospitals operate through rigid chains of command where authority – not competence – drives decisions.
- Lack of documented processes
Workflows differ from person to person. This variability leads to unpredictable care.
- Inconsistent performance monitoring
Without data, leaders manage by assumption, not evidence.
- Minimal accountability
If no one is held responsible for outcomes, systemic mediocrity becomes normal.
- Fragmented communication
When departments operate in silos, patient care breaks down.
These governance failures are far more dangerous than old buildings or limited equipment.
The Solution: A Systems-Driven Governance Model for African Hospitals
Drawing on lessons from MCCAO, Alimosho, LIMH, and the HTSI initiative, a modern governance model must include the following:
- Clear Operational Frameworks
Every role must have documented responsibilities. Every process must be standardised.
- Data-Driven Decision Making
Hospitals should track key indicators—maternal outcomes, waiting times, IGR, and emergency response times.
- Distributed Leadership
Empowering departmental heads, matrons, and unit supervisors creates resilience.
- Transparent Financial Management
Corruption silently erodes health outcomes. Transparency restores trust.
- Strong Clinical Governance
Protocols, audits, case reviews, and adverse event reporting ensure safety.
- Cultural Alignment
The governance model must reinforce values such as integrity, empathy, and discipline.
Case Study: Governance in Action
Hospitals in Lagos that adopted improved governance under HTSI saw rapid gains:
- Clear protocols reduced delays
- Staff understood expectations
- Leadership improved daily supervision
- Patient satisfaction increased
- Revenue improved due to transparent processes
Governance is not theory – it is measurable, practical, and transformative.
Why This Governance Model Works for Africa
- It requires more discipline than money
- It is adaptable to low-resource environments
- It empowers local leadership
- It reduces corruption
- It strengthens continuity during leadership transitions
Africa does not need imported governance templates. It needs models built from experience and aligned with local realities.
One More Thing…
I often reflect on what I’ve learned along the way—about care, leadership, and systems that work. If any of this is useful, you’re welcome to follow along. I’ve documented most of what I share here in my book, Transforming: My Journey through the Lagos State Health System.