Wiysonge Charles S, Paulsen Elizabeth, Lewin Simon, Ciapponi Agustín, Herrera Cristian A, Opiyo Newton, Pantoja Tomas, Rada Gabriel, Oxman Andrew D
Cochrane South Africa, South African Medical Research Council, Francie van Zijl Drive, Parow Valley, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa, 7505.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Sep 11;9(9):CD011084. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011084.pub2.
One target of the Sustainable Development Goals is to achieve "universal health coverage, including financial risk protection, access to quality essential health-care services and access to safe, effective, quality and affordable essential medicines and vaccines for all". A fundamental concern of governments in striving for this goal is how to finance such a health system. This concern is very relevant for low-income countries.
To provide an overview of the evidence from up-to-date systematic reviews about the effects of financial arrangements for health systems in low-income countries. Secondary objectives include identifying needs and priorities for future evaluations and systematic reviews on financial arrangements, and informing refinements in the framework for financial arrangements presented in the overview.
We searched Health Systems Evidence in November 2010 and PDQ-Evidence up to 17 December 2016 for systematic reviews. We did not apply any date, language, or publication status limitations in the searches. We included well-conducted systematic reviews of studies that assessed the effects of financial arrangements on patient outcomes (health and health behaviours), the quality or utilisation of healthcare services, resource use, healthcare provider outcomes (such as sick leave), or social outcomes (such as poverty, employment, or financial burden of patients, e.g. out-of-pocket payment, catastrophic disease expenditure) and that were published after April 2005. We excluded reviews with limitations important enough to compromise the reliability of the findings. Two overview authors independently screened reviews, extracted data, and assessed the certainty of evidence using GRADE. We prepared SUPPORT Summaries for eligible reviews, including key messages, 'Summary of findings' tables (using GRADE to assess the certainty of the evidence), and assessments of the relevance of findings to low-income countries.
We identified 7272 reviews and included 15 in this overview, on: collection of funds (2 reviews), insurance schemes (1 review), purchasing of services (1 review), recipient incentives (6 reviews), and provider incentives (5 reviews). The reviews were published between 2008 and 2015; focused on 13 subcategories; and reported results from 276 studies: 115 (42%) randomised trials, 11 (4%) non-randomised trials, 23 (8%) controlled before-after studies, 51 (19%) interrupted time series, 9 (3%) repeated measures, and 67 (24%) other non-randomised studies. Forty-three per cent (119/276) of the studies included in the reviews took place in low- and middle-income countries. Collection of funds: the effects of changes in user fees on utilisation and equity are uncertain (very low-certainty evidence). It is also uncertain whether aid delivered under the Paris Principles (ownership, alignment, harmonisation, managing for results, and mutual accountability) improves health outcomes compared to aid delivered without conforming to those principles (very low-certainty evidence). Insurance schemes: community-based health insurance may increase service utilisation (low-certainty evidence), but the effects on health outcomes are uncertain (very low-certainty evidence). It is uncertain whether social health insurance improves utilisation of health services or health outcomes (very low-certainty evidence). Purchasing of services: it is uncertain whether increasing salaries of public sector healthcare workers improves the quantity or quality of their work (very low-certainty evidence). Recipient incentives: recipient incentives may improve adherence to long-term treatments (low-certainty evidence), but it is uncertain whether they improve patient outcomes. One-time recipient incentives probably improve patient return for start or continuation of treatment (moderate-certainty evidence) and may improve return for tuberculosis test readings (low-certainty evidence). However, incentives may not improve completion of tuberculosis prophylaxis, and it is uncertain whether they improve completion of treatment for active tuberculosis. Conditional cash transfer programmes probably lead to an increase in service utilisation (moderate-certainty evidence), but their effects on health outcomes are uncertain. Vouchers may improve health service utilisation (low-certainty evidence), but the effects on health outcomes are uncertain (very low-certainty evidence). Introducing a restrictive cap may decrease use of medicines for symptomatic conditions and overall use of medicines, may decrease insurers' expenditures on medicines (low-certainty evidence), and has uncertain effects on emergency department use, hospitalisations, and use of outpatient care (very low-certainty evidence). Reference pricing, maximum pricing, and index pricing for drugs have mixed effects on drug expenditures by patients and insurers as well as the use of brand and generic drugs. Provider incentives: the effects of provider incentives are uncertain (very low-certainty evidence), including: the effects of provider incentives on the quality of care provided by primary care physicians or outpatient referrals from primary to secondary care, incentives for recruiting and retaining health professionals to serve in remote areas, and the effects of pay-for-performance on provider performance, the utilisation of services, patient outcomes, or resource use in low-income countries.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Research based on sound systematic review methods has evaluated numerous financial arrangements relevant to low-income countries, targeting different levels of the health systems and assessing diverse outcomes. However, included reviews rarely reported social outcomes, resource use, equity impacts, or undesirable effects. We also identified gaps in primary research because of uncertainty about applicability of the evidence to low-income countries. Financial arrangements for which the effects are uncertain include external funding (aid), caps and co-payments, pay-for-performance, and provider incentives. Further studies evaluating the effects of these arrangements are needed in low-income countries. Systematic reviews should include all outcomes that are relevant to decision-makers and to people affected by changes in financial arrangements.
可持续发展目标的一个目标是实现“全民健康覆盖,包括财务风险保护、获得优质基本医疗服务以及让所有人都能获得安全、有效、优质且可负担的基本药物和疫苗”。各国政府在努力实现这一目标时,一个基本关切是如何为这样的卫生系统筹集资金。这一关切对低收入国家尤为重要。
概述最新系统评价中有关低收入国家卫生系统筹资安排效果的证据。次要目的包括确定未来对筹资安排进行评价和系统评价的需求及优先事项,并为概述中提出的筹资安排框架的完善提供参考。
我们于2010年11月检索了卫生系统证据数据库,并检索截至2016年12月17日的PDQ证据数据库以获取系统评价。检索时未对日期、语言或出版状态加以限制。我们纳入了对评估筹资安排对患者结局(健康和健康行为)、医疗服务质量或利用、资源使用、医疗服务提供者结局(如病假)或社会结局(如贫困、就业或患者的财务负担,如自付费用、灾难性疾病支出)影响的研究进行的高质量系统评价,且这些评价发表于2005年4月之后。我们排除了存在足以影响研究结果可靠性的重要局限性的评价。两位概述作者独立筛选评价、提取数据,并使用GRADE评估证据的确定性。我们为符合条件的评价编制了SUPPORT摘要,包括关键信息、“结果摘要”表(使用GRADE评估证据的确定性)以及对研究结果与低收入国家相关性的评估。
我们共识别出7272篇评价,本概述纳入了15篇,涉及:资金筹集(2篇评价)、保险计划(1篇评价)、服务购买(1篇评价)、接受方激励措施(6篇评价)以及提供者激励措施(5篇评价)。这些评价发表于2008年至2015年之间;聚焦于13个子类别;并报告了276项研究的结果:115项(42%)随机试验、11项(4%)非随机试验、23项(8%)前后对照研究、51项(19%)中断时间序列研究、9项(3%)重复测量研究以及67项(24%)其他非随机研究。纳入评价的研究中有43%(119/276)在低收入和中等收入国家开展。资金筹集:使用者费用变化对服务利用和公平性的影响尚不确定(证据确定性极低)。与不符合巴黎原则(所有权、一致性、协调性、注重成果管理和相互问责)的援助相比,符合这些原则提供的援助是否能改善健康结局也不确定(证据确定性极低)。保险计划:基于社区的医疗保险可能会增加服务利用(证据确定性低),但其对健康结局的影响尚不确定(证据确定性极低)。社会医疗保险是否能改善卫生服务利用或健康结局尚不确定(证据确定性极低)。服务购买:提高公共部门医护人员工资是否能改善其工作数量或质量尚不确定(证据确定性极低)。接受方激励措施:接受方激励措施可能会提高对长期治疗的依从性(证据确定性低),但其是否能改善患者结局尚不确定。一次性接受方激励措施可能会提高患者开始或继续治疗的复诊率(证据确定性中等),并可能提高结核病检测结果的复诊率(证据确定性低)。然而,激励措施可能无法提高结核病预防的完成率,其是否能提高活动性结核病治疗的完成率也不确定。有条件现金转移计划可能会导致服务利用增加(证据确定性中等),但其对健康结局的影响尚不确定。代金券可能会改善卫生服务利用(证据确定性低),但其对健康结局的影响尚不确定(证据确定性极低)。引入限制性上限可能会减少对症治疗药物的使用和总体用药量,可能会降低保险公司的药品支出(证据确定性低),对急诊科使用、住院以及门诊护理使用的影响尚不确定(证据确定性极低)。药品参考定价、最高定价和指数定价对患者和保险公司的药品支出以及品牌药和仿制药的使用有不同影响。提供者激励措施:提供者激励措施的效果尚不确定(证据确定性极低),包括:提供者激励措施对初级保健医生提供的护理质量或从初级保健向二级保健的门诊转诊的影响、招募和留住卫生专业人员到偏远地区服务的激励措施,以及绩效薪酬对低收入国家提供者绩效、服务利用、患者结局或资源使用的影响。
基于合理系统评价方法的研究已对与低收入国家相关的众多筹资安排进行了评估,这些安排针对卫生系统的不同层面并评估了多种结局。然而,纳入的评价很少报告社会结局、资源使用、公平性影响或不良影响。我们还发现了基础研究中的差距,因为证据对低收入国家的适用性存在不确定性。效果尚不确定的筹资安排包括外部资金(援助)、上限和共付额、绩效薪酬以及提供者激励措施。低收入国家需要进一步开展研究以评估这些安排的效果。系统评价应纳入所有与决策者以及受筹资安排变化影响的人群相关的结局。