Suppr超能文献

低收入国家卫生系统的交付安排:系统评价综述

Delivery arrangements for health systems in low-income countries: an overview of systematic reviews.

作者信息

Ciapponi Agustín, Lewin Simon, Herrera Cristian A, Opiyo Newton, Pantoja Tomas, Paulsen Elizabeth, Rada Gabriel, Wiysonge Charles S, Bastías Gabriel, Dudley Lilian, Flottorp Signe, Gagnon Marie-Pierre, Garcia Marti Sebastian, Glenton Claire, Okwundu Charles I, Peñaloza Blanca, Suleman Fatima, Oxman Andrew D

机构信息

Argentine Cochrane Centre, Institute for Clinical Effectiveness and Health Policy (IECS-CONICET), Dr. Emilio Ravignani 2024, Buenos Aires, Capital Federal, Argentina, C1414CPV.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Sep 13;9(9):CD011083. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011083.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Delivery arrangements include changes in who receives care and when, who provides care, the working conditions of those who provide care, coordination of care amongst different providers, where care is provided, the use of information and communication technology to deliver care, and quality and safety systems. How services are delivered can have impacts on the effectiveness, efficiency and equity of health systems. This broad overview of the findings of systematic reviews can help policymakers and other stakeholders identify strategies for addressing problems and improve the delivery of services.

OBJECTIVES

To provide an overview of the available evidence from up-to-date systematic reviews about the effects of delivery arrangements for health systems in low-income countries. Secondary objectives include identifying needs and priorities for future evaluations and systematic reviews on delivery arrangements and informing refinements of the framework for delivery arrangements outlined in the review.

METHODS

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 delivery 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 or employment) 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.

MAIN RESULTS

We identified 7272 systematic reviews and included 51 of them in this overview. We judged 6 of the 51 reviews to have important methodological limitations and the other 45 to have only minor limitations. We grouped delivery arrangements into eight categories. Some reviews provided more than one comparison and were in more than one category. Across these categories, the following intervention were effective; that is, they have desirable effects on at least one outcome with moderate- or high-certainty evidence and no moderate- or high-certainty evidence of undesirable effects. Who receives care and when: queuing strategies and antenatal care to groups of mothers. Who provides care: lay health workers for caring for people with hypertension, lay health workers to deliver care for mothers and children or infectious diseases, lay health workers to deliver community-based neonatal care packages, midlevel health professionals for abortion care, social support to pregnant women at risk, midwife-led care for childbearing women, non-specialist providers in mental health and neurology, and physician-nurse substitution. Coordination of care: hospital clinical pathways, case management for people living with HIV and AIDS, interactive communication between primary care doctors and specialists, hospital discharge planning, adding a service to an existing service and integrating delivery models, referral from primary to secondary care, physician-led versus nurse-led triage in emergency departments, and team midwifery. Where care is provided: high-volume institutions, home-based care (with or without multidisciplinary team) for people living with HIV and AIDS, home-based management of malaria, home care for children with acute physical conditions, community-based interventions for childhood diarrhoea and pneumonia, out-of-facility HIV and reproductive health services for youth, and decentralised HIV care. Information and communication technology: mobile phone messaging for patients with long-term illnesses, mobile phone messaging reminders for attendance at healthcare appointments, mobile phone messaging to promote adherence to antiretroviral therapy, women carrying their own case notes in pregnancy, interventions to improve childhood vaccination. Quality and safety systems: decision support with clinical information systems for people living with HIV/AIDS. Complex interventions (cutting across delivery categories and other health system arrangements): emergency obstetric referral interventions.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: A wide range of strategies have been evaluated for improving delivery arrangements in low-income countries, using sound systematic review methods in both Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews. These reviews have assessed a range of outcomes. Most of the available evidence focuses on who provides care, where care is provided and coordination of care. For all the main categories of delivery arrangements, we identified gaps in primary research related to uncertainty about the applicability of the evidence to low-income countries, low- or very low-certainty evidence or a lack of studies.

摘要

背景

分娩安排包括接受护理的对象和时间、提供护理的人员、护理人员的工作条件、不同提供者之间的护理协调、护理地点、利用信息和通信技术提供护理以及质量和安全系统。服务的提供方式会对卫生系统的有效性、效率和公平性产生影响。对系统评价结果的这一广泛概述有助于政策制定者和其他利益相关者确定解决问题的策略并改善服务提供。

目的

概述来自最新系统评价的关于低收入国家卫生系统分娩安排效果的现有证据。次要目标包括确定未来对分娩安排进行评价和系统评价的需求及优先事项,并为评价中概述的分娩安排框架的完善提供参考。

方法

我们于2010年11月检索了卫生系统证据库,并截至2016年12月17日检索了PDQ证据库以查找系统评价。检索时未应用任何日期、语言或出版状态限制。我们纳入了对评估分娩安排对患者结局(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(如贫困或就业)的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。两位综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写了SUPPORT总结,包括关键信息、“结果总结”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。

主要结果

我们识别出7272项系统评价,本综述纳入了其中51项。我们判定51项评价中的6项存在重要的方法学局限性,其他45项仅有轻微局限性。我们将分娩安排分为八类。一些评价提供了不止一项比较,属于不止一个类别。在这些类别中,以下干预措施是有效的;即,它们对至少一项结局有理想效果,且有中等或高确定性证据,没有中等或高确定性证据表明有不良效果。接受护理的对象和时间:排队策略以及为母亲群体提供的产前护理。提供护理的人员:非专业卫生工作者护理高血压患者、非专业卫生工作者为母婴或传染病患者提供护理、非专业卫生工作者提供基于社区的新生儿护理套餐、中级卫生专业人员提供堕胎护理、为高危孕妇提供社会支持、助产士主导的生育妇女护理、心理健康和神经科的非专科提供者以及医生与护士的替代。护理协调:医院临床路径、艾滋病毒和艾滋病患者的病例管理、初级保健医生与专科医生之间的互动沟通、医院出院计划、在现有服务中增加一项服务并整合服务提供模式、从初级保健转诊至二级保健、急诊科医生主导与护士主导的分诊以及团队助产。护理地点:大容量机构、为艾滋病毒和艾滋病患者提供的居家护理(有或没有多学科团队)、疟疾的居家管理、患有急性身体疾病儿童的居家护理、针对儿童腹泻和肺炎的社区干预、为青少年提供的机构外艾滋病毒和生殖健康服务以及分散式艾滋病毒护理。信息和通信技术:为慢性病患者发送手机短信、发送手机短信提醒就诊、发送手机短信促进抗逆转录病毒疗法的依从性、孕妇携带自己的病历、改善儿童疫苗接种的干预措施。质量和安全系统:为艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者提供临床信息系统的决策支持。复杂干预措施(跨越分娩类别和其他卫生系统安排):紧急产科转诊干预措施。

作者结论

使用Cochrane综述和非Cochrane综述中的合理系统评价方法,已对一系列改善低收入国家分娩安排的策略进行了评估。这些综述评估了一系列结局。现有证据大多集中在提供护理的人员、护理地点和护理协调方面。对于分娩安排的所有主要类别,我们发现基础研究存在差距,涉及证据对低收入国家适用性的不确定性、低或极低确定性证据或缺乏研究。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d4e3/6483807/f61598747b3b/nCD011083-AFig-FIG01.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验