School of Population and Public Health, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
BMJ Glob Health. 2021 Jun;6(6). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005667.
Integrated health service delivery (IHSD) is a promising approach to improve health system resilience. However, there is a lack of evidence specific to the low/lower-middle-income country (L-LMIC) health systems on how IHSD is used during disease outbreaks. This scoping review aimed to synthesise the emerging evidence on IHSD approaches adopted in L-LMIC during the COVID-19 pandemic and systematically collate their operational features.
A systematic scoping review of peer-reviewed literature, published in English between 1 December 2019 and 12 June 2020, from seven electronic databases was conducted to explore the evidence of IHSD implemented in L-LMICs during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were systematically charted, and key features of IHSD systems were presented according to the postulated research questions of the review.
The literature search retrieved 1487 published articles from which 18 articles met the inclusion criteria and included in this review. Service delivery, health workforce, medicine and technologies were the three most frequently integrated health system building blocks during the COVID-19 pandemic. While responding to COVID-19, the L-LMICs principally implemented the IHSD system via systematic horizontal integration, led by specific policy measures. The government's stewardship, along with the decentralised decision-making capacity of local institutions and multisectoral collaboration, was the critical facilitator for IHSD. Simultaneously, fragmented service delivery structures, fragile supply chain, inadequate diagnostic capacity and insufficient workforce were key barriers towards integration.
A wide array of context-specific IHSD approaches were operationalised in L-LMICs during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Emerging recommendations emphasise the importance of coordination and integration across building blocks and levels of the health system, supported by a responsive governance structure and stakeholder engagement strategies. Future reviews can revisit this emerging evidence base at subsequent phases of COVID-19 response and recovery in L-LMICs to understand how the approaches highlighted here evolve.
综合卫生服务提供(IHSD)是提高卫生系统弹性的一种很有前途的方法。然而,关于 IHSD 在疾病爆发期间如何使用,针对中低收入国家(LMIC)卫生系统的具体证据尚缺乏。本范围界定综述旨在综合中低收入国家在 COVID-19 大流行期间采用 IHSD 方法的新兴证据,并系统地整理其运营特征。
对 2019 年 12 月 1 日至 2020 年 6 月 12 日期间发表的、来自七个电子数据库的同行评议文献进行了系统的范围界定综述,以探索 COVID-19 大流行期间在中低收入国家实施的 IHSD 证据。系统地对数据进行图表绘制,并根据综述的假设研究问题呈现 IHSD 系统的关键特征。
文献检索从 1487 篇已发表文章中检索到 18 篇符合纳入标准的文章,并纳入本综述。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,服务提供、卫生人力、药品和技术是最常整合的三个卫生系统组成部分。在应对 COVID-19 时,中低收入国家主要通过特定政策措施主导的系统横向整合来实施 IHSD 系统。政府的管理,以及地方机构的分散决策能力和多部门合作,是 IHSD 的关键促进因素。同时,服务提供结构碎片化、供应链脆弱、诊断能力不足和劳动力不足是整合的关键障碍。
在 COVID-19 大流行的早期阶段,中低收入国家实施了广泛的特定于背景的 IHSD 方法。新出现的建议强调了协调和整合卫生系统各组成部分和各级的重要性,支持响应式治理结构和利益相关者参与战略。未来的综述可以在中低收入国家 COVID-19 应对和恢复的后续阶段重新审视这一新兴证据基础,以了解这里强调的方法如何演变。