Nossal Institute for Global Health, University of Melbourne , Melbourne, Australia.
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales , Sydney, Australia.
J Health Organ Manag. 2017 May 15;31(3):270-285. doi: 10.1108/JHOM-11-2016-0220.
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine how and to what extent the design and implementation of universal health coverage (UHC) reforms have been influenced by the governance arrangements of health systems in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC); and how governments in these countries have or have not responded to the challenges of governance for UHC. Design/methodology/approach Comparative case study analysis of three Asian countries with substantial experience of UHC reforms (Thailand, Vietnam and China) was undertaken using data from published studies and grey literature. Studies included were those which described the modifications and adaptations that occurred during design and implementation of the UHC programme, the actors and institutions involved and how these changes related to the governance of the health system. Findings Each country adapted the design of their UHC programmes to accommodate their specific institutional arrangements, and then made further modifications in response to issues arising during implementation. The authors found that these modifications were often related to the impacts on governance of the institutional changes inherent in UHC reforms. Governments varied in their response to these governance impacts, with Thailand prepared to adopt new governance modes (which the authors termed as an "adaptive" response), while China and Vietnam have tended to persist with traditional hierarchical governance modes ("reactive" responses). Originality/value This study addresses a gap in current knowledge on UHC reform, and finds evidence of a complex interaction between substantive health sector reform and governance reform in the LMIC context in Asia, confirming recent similar observations on health reforms in high-income countries.
目的 本文旨在探讨中低收入国家(LMIC)的卫生系统治理安排如何以及在何种程度上影响了全民健康覆盖(UHC)改革的设计和实施;以及这些国家的政府如何应对 UHC 治理面临的挑战。
设计/方法/途径 对具有丰富 UHC 改革经验的三个亚洲国家(泰国、越南和中国)进行了比较案例研究,使用了来自已发表研究和灰色文献的数据。纳入的研究描述了 UHC 计划在设计和实施过程中发生的修改和调整、涉及的行为者和机构,以及这些变化与卫生系统治理的关系。
发现 每个国家都根据其特定的制度安排调整了 UHC 计划的设计,然后针对实施过程中出现的问题进行了进一步的修改。作者发现,这些修改通常与 UHC 改革所带来的对治理的影响有关。各国政府对这些治理影响的反应各不相同,泰国准备采用新的治理模式(作者称之为“适应性”反应),而中国和越南则倾向于坚持传统的等级制治理模式(“反应性”反应)。
价值 本研究填补了当前关于 UHC 改革知识的空白,并在亚洲中低收入国家的背景下发现了实质性卫生部门改革与治理改革之间复杂相互作用的证据,证实了最近关于高收入国家卫生改革的类似观察。