Institute of Health Economics, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Int J Technol Assess Health Care. 2023 Aug 1;39(1):e47. doi: 10.1017/S0266462323000120.
Many publicly funded health systems use a mix of privately and publicly operated providers of care to deliver elective surgical services. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the role of privately operated but publicly funded provision of surgical services for adult patients who had cataract or orthopedic surgery within publicly funded health systems in high-income countries.
Electronic databases (Ovid MEDLINE, OVID Embase, and EBSCO EconLit) were searched on 26 March 2021, and gray literature sources were searched on 6 April 2021. Two reviewers independently applied inclusion and exclusion criteria to identify studies, and extracted data. The outcomes evaluated include accessibility, acceptability, safety, clinical effectiveness, efficiency, and cost/cost-effectiveness.
Twenty-nine primary studies met the inclusion criteria and were synthesized narratively. We found mixed results across each of our reported outcomes. Wait times were shorter for patients treated in private facilities. There was evidence that some private facilities cherry-pick or cream-skim by selecting less complex patients, which increases the postoperative length of stay and costs for public facilities, restricts access to private facilities for certain groups of patients, and increases inequality within the health system. Seven studies found improved safety outcomes in private facilities, noting that private patients had a lower preoperative risk of complications. Only two studies reported cost and cost-effectiveness outcomes. One costing study concluded that private facilities' costs were lower than those of public facilities, and a cost-utility study showed that private contracting to reduce public waiting times for joint replacement was cost-effective.
Limited evidence exists that private-sector contracts address existing healthcare delivery problems. Value for money also remains to be evaluated properly.
许多公共资助的卫生系统使用公私合营的医疗机构来提供选择性手术服务。本系统评价的目的是评估在高收入国家的公共资助卫生系统中,为接受白内障或骨科手术的成年患者提供的私立但公共资助的手术服务的作用。
2021 年 3 月 26 日在电子数据库(Ovid MEDLINE、OVID Embase 和 EBSCO EconLit)中进行检索,并于 2021 年 4 月 6 日在灰色文献来源中进行检索。两名审查员独立应用纳入和排除标准来识别研究并提取数据。评估的结果包括可及性、可接受性、安全性、临床效果、效率和成本/成本效益。
29 项初级研究符合纳入标准,并进行了叙述性综合。我们发现我们报告的每一项结果都存在混合结果。在私立机构接受治疗的患者等待时间更短。有证据表明,一些私立机构通过选择不太复杂的患者来挑选或择优挑选,这增加了公立医院的术后住院时间和成本,限制了某些患者群体进入私立机构的机会,并增加了卫生系统内的不平等。有 7 项研究发现私立机构的安全结果有所改善,指出私立患者术前并发症风险较低。只有两项研究报告了成本和成本效益结果。一项成本研究得出结论,私立机构的成本低于公立机构,一项成本效益研究表明,通过私人承包来减少公共关节置换的等待时间是具有成本效益的。
有限的证据表明,私营部门合同解决了现有的医疗服务提供问题。资金的价值仍有待正确评估。