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通过绩效付费来改善低收入和中等收入国家的卫生干预措施提供情况 。

Paying for performance to improve the delivery of health interventions in low- and middle-income countries .

作者信息

Witter Sophie, Fretheim Atle, Kessy Flora L, Lindahl Anne Karin

机构信息

Immpact, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK. 2Global Health Unit, Norwegian Knowledge Centre for the Health Services, Oslo,Norway.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 Feb 15(2):CD007899. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007899.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

There is a growing interest in paying for performance as a means to align the incentives of health workers and health providers with public health goals. However, there is currently a lack of rigorous evidence on the effectiveness of these strategies in improving health care and health, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Moreover, paying for performance is a complex intervention with uncertain benefits and potential harms. A review of evidence on effectiveness is therefore timely, especially as this is an area of growing interest for funders and governments.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the current evidence for the effects of paying for performance on the provision of health care and health outcomes in low- and middle-income countries.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched more than 15 databases in 2009, including the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Group Specialised Register (searched 3 March 2009), CENTRAL (2009, Issue 1) (searched 3 March 2009), MEDLINE, Ovid (1948 to present) (searched 24 June 2011), EMBASE, Ovid (1980 to 2009 Week 09) (searched 2 March 2009), EconLit, Ovid (1969 to February 2009) (searched 5 March 2009), as well as the Social Sciences Citation Index, ISI Web of Science (1975 to present) (searched 8 September 2010). We also searched the websites and online resources of numerous international agencies, organisations and universities to find relevant grey literature and contacted experts in the field. We carried out an updated search on the Results-Based Financing website in April 2011, and re-ran the MEDLINE search in June 2011.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Pay for performance refers to the transfer of money or material goods conditional on taking a measurable action or achieving a predetermined performance target. To be included, a study had to report at least one of the following outcomes: changes in targeted measures of provider performance, such as the delivery or utilisation of healthcare services, or patient outcomes, unintended effects and/or changes in resource use. Studies also needed to use one of the following study designs: randomised trial, non-randomised trial, controlled before-after study or interrupted time series study, and had to have been conducted in low- or middle-income countries (as defined by the World Bank).

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We aimed to present a meta-analysis of results. However, due to the limited number of studies in each category, the diversity of intervention designs and study methods, as well as important contextual differences, we present a narrative synthesis with separate results from each study.

MAIN RESULTS

Nine studies were included in the review: one randomised trial, six controlled before-after studies and two interrupted time series studies (or studies which could be re-analysed as such). The interventions were varied: one used target payments linked to quality of care (in the Philippines). Two used target payments linked to coverage indicators (in Tanzania and Zambia). Three used conditional cash transfers, modified by quality measurements (in Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo). Two used conditional cash transfers without quality measures (in Rwanda and Vietnam). One used a mix of conditional cash transfers and target payments (China). Targeted services also varied. Most of the interventions used a wide range of targets covering inpatient, outpatient and preventive care, including a strong emphasis on services for women and children. However, one focused specifically on tuberculosis (the main outcome measure was cases detected); one on hospital revenues; and one on improved treatment of common illnesses in under-sixes. Participants were in most cases in a mix of public and faith-based facilities (dispensaries, health posts, health centres and hospitals), though districts were also involved and in one case payments were made direct to individual private practitioners.One study was considered to have low risk of bias and one a moderate risk of bias. The other seven studies had a high risk of bias. Only one study included any patient health indicators. Of the four outcome measures, two showed significant improvement for the intervention group (wasting and self reported health by parents of the under-fives), while two showed no significant difference (being C-reactive protein (CRP)-negative and not anaemic). The two more robust studies both found mixed results - gains for some indicators but no improvement for others. Almost all dimensions of potential impact remain under-studied, including intended and unintended impact on health outcomes, equity, organisational change, user payments and satisfaction, resource use and staff satisfaction.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The current evidence base is too weak to draw general conclusions; more robust and also comprehensive studies are needed. Performance-based funding is not a uniform intervention, but rather a range of approaches. Its effects depend on the interaction of several variables, including the design of the intervention (e.g. who receives payments, the magnitude of the incentives, the targets and how they are measured), the amount of additional funding, other ancillary components such as technical support, and contextual factors, including the organisational context in which it is implemented.

摘要

背景

作为一种使卫生工作者和卫生服务提供者的激励措施与公共卫生目标保持一致的手段,按绩效付费越来越受到关注。然而,目前缺乏关于这些策略在改善医疗保健和健康状况方面有效性的严格证据,特别是在低收入和中等收入国家。此外,按绩效付费是一种复杂的干预措施,其益处和潜在危害尚不确定。因此,对有效性证据进行综述很有必要,尤其是鉴于这是资助者和政府日益关注的领域。

目的

评估目前关于按绩效付费对低收入和中等收入国家医疗保健提供及健康结果影响的证据。

检索方法

2009年我们检索了15多个数据库,包括Cochrane有效实践与护理组织小组专业注册库(2009年3月3日检索)、Cochrane系统评价数据库(2009年第1期)(2009年3月3日检索)、MEDLINE(Ovid平台,1948年至今)(2011年6月24日检索)、EMBASE(Ovid平台,1980年至2009年第9周)(2009年3月2日检索)、EconLit(Ovid平台,1969年至2009年2月)(2009年3月5日检索),以及社会科学引文索引(ISI Web of Science,1975年至今)(2010年9月8日检索)。我们还检索了众多国际机构、组织和大学的网站及在线资源,以查找相关灰色文献,并联系了该领域的专家。2011年4月我们在基于结果的融资网站上进行了更新检索,并于2011年6月重新进行了MEDLINE检索。

入选标准

按绩效付费是指根据采取可衡量的行动或实现预定绩效目标来转移资金或物资。纳入的研究必须报告以下至少一项结果:提供者绩效的目标指标变化,如医疗服务的提供或利用情况,或患者结果、非预期影响和/或资源使用变化。研究还需采用以下研究设计之一:随机试验、非随机试验、前后对照研究或中断时间序列研究,且必须在低收入或中等收入国家(根据世界银行的定义)进行。

数据收集与分析

我们旨在对结果进行荟萃分析。然而,由于每个类别中的研究数量有限、干预设计和研究方法的多样性以及重要的背景差异,我们进行了叙述性综合分析,呈现每项研究的单独结果。

主要结果

该综述纳入了9项研究:1项随机试验、6项前后对照研究和2项中断时间序列研究(或可重新分析为此类的研究)。干预措施各不相同:一项采用与护理质量挂钩的目标支付(在菲律宾)。两项采用与覆盖指标挂钩的目标支付(在坦桑尼亚和赞比亚)。三项采用经质量衡量调整的有条件现金转移支付(在卢旺达、布隆迪和刚果民主共和国)。两项采用无质量衡量的有条件现金转移支付(在卢旺达和越南)。一项采用有条件现金转移支付和目标支付相结合的方式(中国)。目标服务也各不相同。大多数干预措施使用了广泛的目标,涵盖住院、门诊和预防保健,尤其强调针对妇女和儿童的服务。然而,一项专门针对结核病(主要结果指标是检测到的病例数);一项针对医院收入;一项针对改善6岁以下儿童常见疾病的治疗。参与者大多来自公立和宗教性质的机构(诊疗所、卫生站、健康中心和医院),不过也涉及地区,还有一项是直接向个体私人执业者支付费用。一项研究被认为偏倚风险低,一项偏倚风险中等。其他7项研究偏倚风险高。只有一项研究纳入了任何患者健康指标。在四项结果指标中,两项显示干预组有显著改善(五岁以下儿童消瘦情况和家长自我报告的健康状况),而两项无显著差异(C反应蛋白(CRP)呈阴性和无贫血)。两项更可靠的研究结果均不一——某些指标有改善,但其他指标无改善。几乎所有潜在影响的维度仍研究不足,包括对健康结果、公平性、组织变革、用户支付和满意度、资源使用以及工作人员满意度的预期和非预期影响。

作者结论

目前的证据基础过于薄弱,无法得出一般性结论;需要更有力且全面的研究。基于绩效的资助不是一种统一的干预措施,而是一系列方法。其效果取决于多个变量的相互作用,包括干预措施的设计(如谁获得支付、激励幅度、目标以及如何衡量)、额外资金的数量、其他辅助要素如技术支持,以及背景因素,包括实施该措施的组织背景。

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