Lavoie Josée G, Varcoe Colleen, Wathen C Nadine, Ford-Gilboe Marilyn, Browne Annette J
Department of Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Ongomiizwin Research, 715 John Buhler Research Centre, 727 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg, MB, R3E 3P5, Canada.
School of Nursing, The University of British Columbia, T201-2211 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 2B5, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Sep 10;18(1):705. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-3501-3.
Non-government, not-for-profit community health centres (CHCs) play a crucial role within healthcare systems in fostering equity, acting both as direct providers of services and as sentinels of health and social inequity. In a study of an intervention to promote equity-oriented health care, we enlisted four diverse primary healthcare clinics with mandates to serve highly marginalized populations. All of these CHCs operate as not-for-profit, non-government organizations (NGOs), and have a marginal relationship financially and socially to other parts of the system. The purpose of this paper is to provide an analysis of the factors that shape how CHCs are able to carry out an equity mandate and, from this, to identify what is required at the level of policy to enhance capacity to provide equity-oriented health care.
We systematically examined the clinics' policy and funding contexts, and identified influences on the clinics' capacities to promote equity-oriented health care.
We identified three key mechanisms of influence, each playing out against the backdrop of a contested and marginal position of CHCs within the health care system: a) accountability and performance frameworks; b) patterns of funding and allocation of resources, and c) pathways for emergent priorities. We examine these mechanisms, considering how each influenced the pursuit of equity, and propose policy directions to optimize the primary health care sectors' capacity to support equity-oriented health care.
Although this analysis is based on a study within a high-income country, we argue that because the dynamics between community health centres and broader healthcare systems are similar across national boundaries, the implications have applicability to low and middle-income countries.
非政府、非营利性社区卫生中心(CHC)在医疗体系中对于促进公平发挥着关键作用,既作为服务的直接提供者,又作为健康与社会不平等的哨兵。在一项促进以公平为导向的医疗保健的干预研究中,我们招募了四家不同的基层医疗诊所,其任务是为高度边缘化人群提供服务。所有这些社区卫生中心均作为非营利性非政府组织(NGO)运营,在财务和社会层面与体系的其他部分存在边缘关系。本文的目的是分析影响社区卫生中心如何能够执行公平任务的因素,并据此确定在政策层面需要采取什么措施来增强提供以公平为导向的医疗保健的能力。
我们系统地研究了诊所的政策和资金背景,并确定了对诊所促进以公平为导向的医疗保健能力的影响因素。
我们确定了三种关键影响机制,每种机制都在社区卫生中心在医疗体系中所处的有争议的边缘地位背景下发挥作用:a)问责制和绩效框架;b)资金模式和资源分配,以及c)新出现的优先事项的途径。我们研究了这些机制,考虑了每种机制如何影响对公平的追求,并提出了政策方向,以优化初级卫生保健部门支持以公平为导向的医疗保健的能力。
尽管本分析基于在一个高收入国家开展的研究,但我们认为,由于社区卫生中心与更广泛的医疗体系之间的动态关系在国界之间是相似的,因此这些影响适用于低收入和中等收入国家。