Independent Consultant, 1620 Corcoran St NW, Apt A, Washington, DC, USA.
ThinkWell, Research & Evaluation Division, 1155 F Street N.W., Suite 1050, Washington, DC 20004, USA.
Health Policy Plan. 2017 Oct 1;32(8):1120-1126. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czx053.
This paper seeks to systematically describe the length and content of quality checklists used in performance-based financing programmes, their similarities and differences, and how checklists have evolved over time. We compiled a list of supply-side, health facility-based performance-based financing (PBF) programmes in low- and lower middle-income countries based on a document review. We then solicited PBF manuals and quality checklists from implementers and donors of these PBF mechanisms. We entered each indicator from each quality checklist into a database verbatim in English, and translated into English from French where appropriate, and categorized each indicator according to the Donabedian framework and an author-derived categorization. We extracted 8,490 quality indicators from 68 quality checklists across 32 PBF implementations in 28 countries. On average, checklists contained 125 indicators; within the same program, checklists tend to grow as they are updated. Using the Donabedian framework, 80% of indicators were structure-type, 19% process-type, and less than 1% outcome-type. The author-derived categorization showed that 57% of indicators relate to availability of resources, 24% to managing the facility and 17% assess knowledge and effort. There is a high degree of similarity in a narrow set of indicators used in checklists for common service types such as maternal, neonatal and child health. We conclude that performance-based financing offers an appealing approach to targeting specific quality shortfalls and advancing toward the Sustainable Development Goals of high quality coverage. Currently most indicators focus on structural issues and resource availability. There is scope to rationalize and evolve the quality checklists of these programs to help achieve national and global goals to improve quality of care.
本文旨在系统描述绩效激励型融资项目中使用的质量检查表的长度和内容、它们的相似之处和不同之处,以及检查表随时间的演变过程。我们根据文献回顾,编制了一份中低收入国家供应方、基于卫生机构的绩效激励型融资(PBF)项目清单。然后,我们向这些 PBF 机制的实施者和捐助者征集 PBF 手册和质量检查表。我们将每个质量检查表中的每个指标逐字输入一个英文数据库,如有必要,从法语翻译为英文,并根据 Donabedian 框架和作者自创的分类对每个指标进行分类。我们从 28 个国家的 32 个 PBF 实施项目中的 68 份质量检查表中提取了 8490 个质量指标。平均而言,检查表包含 125 个指标;在同一个项目中,检查表随着更新而不断增加。使用 Donabedian 框架,80%的指标是结构型,19%是过程型,不到 1%是结果型。作者自创的分类显示,57%的指标与资源的可用性有关,24%与设施管理有关,17%与知识和努力的评估有关。在母婴、新生儿和儿童健康等常见服务类型的检查表中,使用的指标有高度的相似性。我们得出结论,绩效激励型融资为针对特定质量缺陷并朝着高质量覆盖的可持续发展目标前进提供了一种有吸引力的方法。目前,大多数指标都集中在结构问题和资源可用性上。有必要对这些项目的质量检查表进行合理化和改进,以帮助实现提高护理质量的国家和全球目标。