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BackgroundHealthcare service provision, planning, and management depend on the availability of a geolocated, up-to-date, comprehensive health facility database (HFDB) to adequately meet a population's healthcare needs. HFDBs are an integral component of national health system infrastructure forming the basis of efficient health service delivery, planning, surveillance, and ensuring equitable resource distribution, response to epidemics and outbreaks, as well as for research. Despite the value of HFDBs, their availability remains a challenge in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Many SSA countries face challenges in creating a HFDB; existing facility lists are incomplete, lack geographical coordinates, or contain outdated information on facility designation, service availability, or capacity. Even in countries with a HFDB, it is often not available open-access to health system stakeholders. Consequently, multiple national and subnational parallel efforts attempt to construct HFDBs, resulting in duplication and lack of governmental input, use, and validation.Main bodyIn this paper, we advocate for a harmonized SSA-wide HFDB. To achieve this, we elaborate on the steps required and challenges to overcome. We provide an overview of the minimum attributes of a HFDB and discuss past and current efforts to collate HFDBs at the country and regional (SSA) levels. We contend that a complete HFDB should include administrative units, geographic coordinates of facilities, attributes of service availability and capacity, facilities from both public and private sectors, be updated regularly, and be available to health system stakeholders through an open access policy. We provide historical and recent examples while looking at key issues and challenges, such as privacy, legitimacy, resources, and leadership, which must be considered to achieve such HFDBs.ConclusionA harmonized HFDB for all SSA countries will facilitate efficient healthcare planning and service provision. A continental, cross-border effort will further support planning during natural disasters, conflicts, and migration. This is only achievable if there is a regional commitment from countries and health system stakeholders to open data sharing. This SSA-wide HFDB should be a government-led initiative with contributions from all stakeholders, ensuring no one is left behind in the pursuit of improved health service provision and universal health coverage.

Original publication

DOI

10.1186/s12916-025-04023-z

Type

Journal

BMC medicine

Publication Date

04/2025

Volume

23

Addresses

Department of Public Health, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium. pmacharia@itg.be.

Keywords

Humans, Databases, Factual, Health Facilities, Delivery of Health Care, Africa South of the Sahara