Khan Zoheb, Haddad Frederico, Rao Vinodkumar, R Jith J, Breeze Parvathy, Garimella Surekha, London Leslie
Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP), São Paulo, Brazil.
Centre for Social Development in Africa, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Int J Equity Health. 2025 Jul 9;24(1):199. doi: 10.1186/s12939-025-02567-3.
Health systems worldwide increasingly involve non-state actors in governance and service provision, often to address perceived limitations in public sector capacity to achieve or maintain universal health coverage. Contracts are a key mechanism for structuring such cooperation, enabling governments to define public priorities, specify the resources and services required to achieve them, establish performance requirements for contractors, and define accountability mechanisms. Moreover, community participation in the design and monitoring-or governance-of contracts could enhance the effectiveness of contracting by making services more locally responsive and accountable. This article reviews the global evidence on contracting out-with and without community participation-and its effects on access to primary care services, the quality of these services, and equity in health.
A scoping review was undertaken following the PRISMA checklist for evidence synthesis. A common search string was applied to five databases - SciELO, LILACS, EBSCOhost, Scopus, and Google Scholar - to search for articles relating to our research questions in English, Spanish and Portuguese, with no restrictions on publication date. After three rounds of review, 81 articles were selected from a universe of 3,276 articles and subjected to full data analysis. These were complemented by 14 handpicked articles meeting our study criteria and 26 supplementary references.
We find that community participation in the governance of contracting is rare, but can promote access and quality. However, it requires a contracting environment that supports transparency, cooperation from governments and providers, and resourcing commitments. More generally, contracting is often associated with access gains, but the evidence on quality and equity is mixed.
Contracting of non-state providers in pluralistic primary care systems that incorporates the participation of communities in its governance could be a feasible policy to promote universal health coverage while also effecting democratic rights of citizens to participate in healthcare governance. Primary research is required to better understand how to promote meaningful community participation, and to identify the contractual details and features of specific contractual environments that are connected to better outcomes.
全球卫生系统越来越多地让非国家行为体参与治理和服务提供,这通常是为了应对公共部门在实现或维持全民健康覆盖方面能力的明显局限。合同是构建这种合作关系的关键机制,使政府能够明确公共优先事项,规定实现这些事项所需的资源和服务,确立对承包商的绩效要求,并界定问责机制。此外,社区参与合同的设计和监督(即治理),可以通过使服务更能响应当地需求并增强问责性,从而提高合同的有效性。本文回顾了关于有社区参与和没有社区参与情况下外包服务的全球证据,以及其对初级保健服务可及性、这些服务的质量和卫生公平性的影响。
按照PRISMA证据综合清单进行了一项范围综述。使用一个通用搜索字符串在五个数据库——科学电子图书馆在线(SciELO)、拉丁美洲和加勒比卫生科学数据库(LILACS)、EBSCOhost、Scopus和谷歌学术搜索——中搜索与我们研究问题相关的英文、西班牙文和葡萄牙文文章,对出版日期无限制。经过三轮评审,从3276篇文章中选出81篇进行全面数据分析。另外还有14篇符合我们研究标准的精选文章以及26篇补充参考文献作为补充。
我们发现社区参与合同治理的情况很少见,但可以促进可及性和质量。然而,这需要一个支持透明度、政府和提供者合作以及资源承诺的合同环境。更普遍地说,外包服务通常与可及性的提高相关,但关于质量和公平性的证据好坏参半。
在多元初级保健系统中让非国家提供者参与合同外包,并让社区参与其治理,可能是一项可行的政策,既能促进全民健康覆盖,又能实现公民参与医疗治理的民主权利。需要进行初步研究,以更好地理解如何促进有意义的社区参与,并确定与更好结果相关的合同细节和特定合同环境的特征。