Whyle Eleanor Beth, Olivier Jill
School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Health Policy Plan. 2016 Dec;31(10):1515-1529. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czw075. Epub 2016 Jun 13.
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the private sector-including international donors, non-governmental organizations, for-profit providers and traditional healers-plays a significant role in health financing and delivery. The use of the private sector in furthering public health goals is increasingly common. By working with the private sector through public -: private engagement (PPE), states can harness private sector resources to further public health goals. PPE initiatives can take a variety of forms and understanding of these models is limited. This paper presents the results of a Campbell systematic literature review conducted to establish the types and the prevalence of PPE projects for health service delivery and financing in Southern Africa. PPE initiatives identified through the review were categorized according to a PPE typology. The review reveals that the full range of PPE models, eight distinct models, are utilized in the Southern African context. The distribution of the available evidence-including significant gaps in the literature-is discussed, and key considerations for researchers, implementers, and current and potential PPE partners are presented. It was found that the literature is disproportionately representative of PPE initiatives located in South Africa, and of those that involve for-profit partners and international donors. A significant gap in the literature identified through the study is the scarcity of information regarding the relationship between international donors and national governments. This information is key to strengthening these partnerships, improving partnership outcomes and capacitating recipient countries. The need for research that disaggregates PPE models and investigates PPE functioning in context is demonstrated.
在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),包括国际捐助者、非政府组织、营利性提供者和传统治疗师在内的私营部门在卫生筹资和服务提供方面发挥着重要作用。利用私营部门推进公共卫生目标的做法越来越普遍。通过公私合作(PPE)与私营部门合作,各国能够利用私营部门资源来推进公共卫生目标。PPE举措可以采取多种形式,而对这些模式的了解有限。本文介绍了一项坎贝尔系统文献综述的结果,该综述旨在确定南部非洲卫生服务提供和筹资方面PPE项目的类型和流行程度。通过该综述确定的PPE举措根据一种PPE类型进行了分类。该综述表明,在南部非洲背景下使用了所有类型的PPE模式,即八种不同的模式。讨论了现有证据的分布情况,包括文献中的重大空白,并提出了研究人员、实施者以及当前和潜在PPE合作伙伴的关键考虑因素。研究发现,文献中不成比例地代表了位于南非的PPE举措,以及那些涉及营利性合作伙伴和国际捐助者的举措。通过该研究确定的文献中的一个重大空白是关于国际捐助者与国家政府之间关系的信息稀缺。这些信息对于加强这些伙伴关系、改善伙伴关系成果以及增强受援国能力至关重要。研究表明需要对PPE模式进行分类并调查其在实际环境中的运作情况的研究。