Birkenmaier Julie, Maynard Brandy R, Blumhagen Harly M, Shanks Hannah
Saint Louis University School of Social Work St. Louis Missouri USA.
Campbell Syst Rev. 2024 Dec 6;20(4):e70008. doi: 10.1002/cl2.70008. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Poverty is considered one of the social determinants of health (i.e., a range of social and environmental conditions that affect health and well-being) because of its association with significant health problems. In recent years, healthcare settings have emerged as focal points for poverty interventions with direct health implications. Medical institutions are increasingly implementing financial partnerships to provide interventions targeted at improving the financial well-being of patients with the dual objective of boosting appointment attendance rates and alleviating financial burdens on patients. While medical-financial partnerships (MFPs) appear to be growing in popularity, it is unclear if these interventions positively impact financial and/or health outcomes.
The purpose of this review is to inform policy and practice relevant to MFPs by analyzing and synthesizing empirical evidence related to their health and financial outcomes. The primary objectives of this review is to answer the following research questions: (1) What is the extent and quality of MFP intervention research? (2) What are the effects on financial outcomes of financial services embedded within healthcare settings? (3) What are the effects on health-related outcomes of financial services embedded within healthcare settings?
We conducted a comprehensive search for published and gray literature from September to December 2023. We searched for and retrieved published studies from Google, Google Scholar, and 10 Electronic databases. We also searched five relevant websites and two trial registries for registered studies. We harvested from the reference lists of included studies and conducted forward citation searching using Google Scholar. Lastly, we contacted the first authors of the four included studies and requested information about unpublished studies, studies in progress, and published studies potentially missed in the other search activities.
Studies eligible for this review met the following criteria. First, studies must have used a prospective randomized controlled trial or quasi-experimental (QED) research design with parallel cohorts. Second, studies must have involved an intervention that provides financial services on-site within a healthcare setting. Third, the studies must have measured a financial outcome. Fourth, to meet the criteria for on-site financial services, interventions must have included at least one of the following: (1) financial education, counseling or coaching, (2) credit counseling, or (3) the provision of services that assist patients to access financial products or services, such as free tax preparation services, or (4) services to increase income, such as screening for public benefits and assistance with the application process, as well as employment services (e.g., assistance with resume writing and job interviewing skills). Health-related outcomes were extracted and analyzed, but were not required for eligibility.
Searches were saved in the reference management software EndNote2, and duplicates were removed and uploaded to Rayyan. Four reviewers then completed title and abstract screening on 66,807 entries in Rayyan. Three reviewers independently reviewed the 26 articles that were moved forward for full-text screening. A fourth reviewer reviewed discrepancies and made the final decision to include or exclude. Four studies that satisfied the inclusion criteria were retained for data extraction using a standardized extraction form. Because the included studies did not measure and report sufficient data to calculate effect sizes for similar outcomes, quantitative synthesis was not possible. Effect sizes were calculated when possible, and study outcomes were described.
Of the four unique studies included in this review, two were randomized control trials and two were QEDs. Three of the four studies were conducted in pediatric settings. Two of the studies focused on tax preparation only as their financial intervention, both offering a VITA tax clinic on-site in the healthcare clinic setting. One study featured financial coaching, which included a bundle of services such as one-on-one case management, budgeting and goal setting, and the fourth study provided financial counseling over two sessions delivered remotely. All four studies reported at least one financial outcome, and two studies reported at least one health-related outcome. The evidence on the health and financial impacts of MFPs is limited due to the small number of included studies and lack of authors reporting data to calculate effect sizes. Results indicate small and nonsignificant effects of MFPs on financial outcomes reported, and some author-reported positive statistically significant effects on attending appointments and adhering to vaccination schedules. The risk of bias assessment indicated important methodological weaknesses across included studies.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Although MFPs are becoming popular and have the potential to improve financial and health outcomes, there is an overall lack of evidence about whether MFPs are meeting their goals. Very few studies met inclusion criteria, and those that did were generally low quality, and therefore, we were unable to draw any conclusions regarding the intervention effects. Given the nascent nature of the research, the high level of enthusiasm for MFPS seems to be outpacing the evidence about their effectiveness on important outcomes. We advocate that healthcare settings invest first in rigorous research on pilot MFPs and disseminate their findings widely before making a determination about taking them to scale in practice and/or move ahead to integrate them into healthcare policy.
贫困因其与重大健康问题相关联,被视为健康的社会决定因素之一(即一系列影响健康和福祉的社会及环境条件)。近年来,医疗保健场所已成为具有直接健康影响的贫困干预重点。医疗机构越来越多地实施财务伙伴关系,以提供旨在改善患者财务状况的干预措施,实现提高预约就诊率和减轻患者经济负担的双重目标。虽然医疗 - 财务伙伴关系(MFPs)似乎越来越受欢迎,但尚不清楚这些干预措施是否对财务和/或健康结果产生积极影响。
本综述的目的是通过分析和综合与MFPs的健康和财务结果相关的实证证据,为与MFPs相关的政策和实践提供参考。本综述的主要目标是回答以下研究问题:(1)MFP干预研究的范围和质量如何?(2)医疗保健场所内嵌入的金融服务对财务结果有何影响?(3)医疗保健场所内嵌入的金融服务对健康相关结果有何影响?
我们在2023年9月至12月期间对已发表和灰色文献进行了全面搜索。我们在谷歌、谷歌学术和10个电子数据库中搜索并检索已发表的研究。我们还在五个相关网站和两个试验注册库中搜索注册研究。我们从纳入研究的参考文献列表中收集信息,并使用谷歌学术进行向前引文搜索。最后,我们联系了四项纳入研究的第一作者,询问有关未发表研究、正在进行的研究以及在其他搜索活动中可能遗漏的已发表研究的信息。
符合本综述条件的研究需满足以下标准。首先,研究必须采用前瞻性随机对照试验或具有平行队列的准实验(QED)研究设计。其次,研究必须涉及在医疗保健场所内现场提供金融服务的干预措施。第三,研究必须测量了财务结果。第四,为满足现场金融服务的标准,干预措施必须至少包括以下之一:(1)金融教育、咨询或辅导,(2)信贷咨询,(3)提供协助患者获取金融产品或服务的服务,如免费税务申报服务,或(4)增加收入的服务,如筛查公共福利并协助申请过程以及就业服务(如协助撰写简历和求职面试技巧)。提取并分析了与健康相关的结果,但纳入标准中不要求此内容。
搜索结果保存在参考文献管理软件EndNote2中,去除重复项后上传至Rayyan。然后,四位评审员在Rayyan中对66,807条记录进行了标题和摘要筛选。三位评审员独立评审了进入全文筛选的26篇文章。第四位评审员审查了分歧并做出最终的纳入或排除决定。使用标准化提取表保留了四项符合纳入标准的研究进行数据提取。由于纳入研究未测量和报告足够的数据以计算类似结果的效应量,因此无法进行定量综合。在可能的情况下计算效应量,并描述研究结果。
本综述纳入的四项独特研究中,两项为随机对照试验,两项为准实验。四项研究中有三项在儿科环境中进行。其中两项研究仅将税务申报作为其财务干预措施,均在医疗诊所现场提供志愿者所得税协助(VITA)税务诊所服务。一项研究提供金融辅导,包括一系列服务,如一对一的案例管理、预算编制和目标设定,第四项研究通过远程进行的两期课程提供财务咨询。所有四项研究均报告了至少一项财务结果,两项研究报告了至少一项与健康相关的结果。由于纳入研究数量较少且缺乏作者报告计算效应量的数据,关于MFPs对健康和财务影响的证据有限。结果表明,MFPs对报告的财务结果的影响较小且无统计学意义,一些作者报告了对就诊预约和遵守疫苗接种计划有积极的统计学显著影响。偏倚风险评估表明纳入研究存在重要的方法学缺陷。
尽管MFPs越来越受欢迎且有可能改善财务和健康结果,但总体而言,缺乏关于MFPs是否实现其目标的证据。很少有研究符合纳入标准,而符合标准的研究质量普遍较低,因此,我们无法就干预效果得出任何结论。鉴于该研究尚处于初期阶段,对MFPs的高度热情似乎超过了关于其对重要结果有效性的证据。我们主张,医疗保健场所应首先对试点MFPs进行严格研究,并在决定将其推广至实际应用规模和/或将其纳入医疗保健政策之前,广泛传播研究结果。