| Literature DB >> 23637757 |
Naomi Beyeler1, Anna York De La Cruz, Dominic Montagu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The private sector plays a large role in health services delivery in low- and middle-income countries; yet significant gaps remain in the quality and accessibility of private sector services. Clinical social franchising, which applies the commercial franchising model to achieve social goals and improve health care, is increasingly used in developing countries to respond to these limitations. Despite the growth of this approach, limited evidence documents the effect of social franchising on improving health care quality and access. OBJECTIVES AND METHODS: We examined peer-reviewed and grey literature to evaluate the effect of social franchising on health care quality, equity, cost-effectiveness, and health outcomes. We included all studies of clinical social franchise programs located in low- and middle-income countries. We assessed study bias using the WHO-Johns Hopkins Rigour Scale and used narrative synthesis to evaluate the findings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23637757 PMCID: PMC3634059 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0060669
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1PRISMA Study Selection Flow Diagram.
Summary of Health Knowledge and Behavior Findings.
| Study | Country | Health Area | Franchise | Study Design | Bias1 | Main Findings |
| Agha et al. 2007b | Nepal | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Quasi-Experimental | 4 | No change in current use of family planning or use of ANC services during last pregnancy in either franchise or control district |
| Aung et al. in press | Myanmar | Child Health | Full | Cluster Randomized Trial | 8 | Intervention districts experienced increased use of ORS + Zinc compared to control districts. Intervention districts experienced increased use of ORS, while there was no change in control districts. |
| Berk and Adhvaryu 2012 | Kenya | Child Health | Cross-sectional DHS data analysis | 4 | Proximity to franchise clinics increased overall rate of treatment for childhood illness by 14.2%. Slightly increased average number of childhood vaccinations. No association with treatment for diarrhea. | |
| Decker and Montagu 2007 | Kenya | Family Planning | Full | Cross-sectional client survey | 2 | Youth clients at franchise clinics were more likely to use modern family planning methods than youth at non-franchised clinics |
| Hennink and Clements 2005 | Pakistan | Family Planning | Fractional | Quasi-Experimental | 6 | After introduction of the franchise there was no change in overall contraceptive prevalence rate in intervention communities. There was a shift in contraceptive methods, with increased use of sterilization and decreased condom use. Unmet need for family planning increased in one site and declined in a second site. Compared to control districts, intervention districts experienced increased knowledge of modern family planning methods. |
| Kozhimannil et al. 2009 | Philippines | Maternal Health | Cross-sectional DHS data analysis | 4 | Greater exposure to franchise clinics is not associated with any change in the percentage of women receiving an ANC visit in the first trimester or receiving at least 4 ANC visits, but is associated with increased frequency of ANC care. Greater exposure is not associated with any change in the rate of facility delivery, but is associated with increase in delivery in private facility.No change in % of women receiving an ANC visit in the first trimester, or receiving at least 4 ANC visits | |
| Plautz et al. 2003 | Madagascar | Reproductive Health | Full | Pre and post household survey with youth | 3 | Greater exposure to franchise associated with higher self-efficacy for purchase and use of condoms, and higher perceived efficacy of condoms among youth. Greater exposure associated with increased use of condoms among males and increased use of modern contraceptive methods among females. |
Out of a possible rating of 9, where score of 9 is the least biased. WHO-JHU Synthesizing Intervention Effectiveness Project 9-point rigour scale.
In the authors' view the use of national survey data to evaluate programs, as applied in these two studies, is inappropriate and highly susceptible to confounding from a number of sources. For these reasons, despite scores of 4 on the rigour scale, we believe the results from these studies should be assessed with caution.
Summary of Quality Findings.
| Study | Country | Health Area | Franchise | Study Design | Bias | Main Findings |
| Agha et al. 2007a; Agha & Balal 2003 | Nepal | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Pre- and post- client exit interviews | 3 | After introduction of a franchise there is no change in the percentage of returning clients; however there is a significant increase in return visit among educated women. Clients more likely to report attendance at the franchise clinic for reasons related to high quality. |
| Agha et al. 2007b; Agha et al. 2003 | Nepal | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Quasi-experimental | 4 | Percentage of returning clients increased from 83% to 93% following introduction of the franchise; no change at control clinics. Satisfied clients more likely to return. Client satisfaction increased at intervention clinics from 55% to 77%; no change at control clinics. |
| Agha et al. 2011 | Pakistan | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional provider survey | 3 | Comparing franchised and non-franchised private providers there was no difference in provider knowledge of IUD insertions or self-efficacy in ability to insert IUD. After controlling for training, there was no difference in number of IUD insertions. |
| Bishai 2008 | Pakistan | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 2 | Franchise clinics are of higher quality than non-franchised private facilities, lower quality than government clinics. Equivalent client satisfaction at franchise and non-franchise clinics. |
| Decker and Montagu 2007 | Kenya | Reproductive Health | Cross-sectional Client Survey | 4 | Franchise providers more likely to offer targeted family planning for youth than non-franchise providers. Youth at franchise clinics more likely to receive counseling. | |
| Montagu et al. 2005 | Nepal | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional Mystery Clients | 2 | Comparing franchised and non-franchised private providers there was no significant difference in clinic facility quality. Provider practice was poor across all facility types; franchises performed better on some dimensions of care (e.g. privacy), and worse on others (e.g. wait times). |
| Ngo et al. 2009 | Vietnam | Reproductive Health | Gov′ment | Quasi-Experimental | 7 | After introduction of a new franchise clients have improved perception of staff attitude, no change in perceived quality or staff expertise, and client satisfaction increased. Community has improved perception of overall clinic quality and staff expertise. |
| O'Connell et al. 2011 | Myanmar | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Qualitative | N/A | Clients perceived that SQH clinics are of higher quality, particularly quality of medications, privacy, range of services, technical competency. |
| Shah et al. 2011 | Pakistan Ethiopia | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 3 | In Pakistan franchise clinics are higher quality than non-franchised private clinics and similar quality to public clinics. In Ethiopia franchise clinics are higher quality than non-franchised private clinics and lower quality than public clinics. |
| Stephenson et al. 2004 | Pakistan Ethiopia India | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 3 | Franchises offered more contraceptive brands but had fewer reproductive health services and fewer staff than non-franchise private clinics. Comparing franchised clinics with non-franchised private clinics, client satisfaction was higher in franchised clinics in Pakistan, lower in franchised clinics in Ethiopia, and equivalent across clinic types in India. In Pakistan client willingness to return was higher in franchised clinics than in non-franchised private clinics, while in Ethiopia willingness to return was lower among clients of franchised clinics. |
Summary of Service Utilization Findings.
| Study | Country | Health Area | Franchise | Study Design | Bias | Main Findings |
| Agha et al. 2003 | Nepal | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Pre/post- client exit interviews | 3 | Increase in average daily client volume. No change in percentage of clients using franchised services (reproductive and maternal health) |
| Huntington et al. 2012 | Myanmar | Reproductive & child health | Fractional | Prospective Cohort | 2 | Average family planning and child health monthly service volume increased, no change in client volume for maternal health services |
| Lonnroth et al. 2007 | Myanmar | Tuberculosis | Fractional | Cross-sectional analysis TB notification data | After launch of TB services, overall notification rate for TB increased. Franchise providers reported 15% of all cases | |
| Ngo et al. 2010 | Vietnam | Reproductive Health | Gov′ment | Quasi-Experimental | 7 | After introduction of a franchise network there was a 40% increase in client volume, 51% increase in client volume for reproductive health, and 45% increase in client volume for family planning In household surveys there was an increase in self-reported frequency of use of franchised services, but no increase in self-reported use. |
| Qureshi 2010 | Pakistan | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional provider survey | 2 | Franchise affiliation associated with higher weekly client volume |
| Stephenson et al. 2004 | Pakistan Ethiopia India | Reproductive Health | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 3 | Franchise associated with higher total client volume and family planning client volume, as compared to non-franchised private clinics. |
Summary of Cost-Effectiveness Findings.
| Study | Country | Health Area | Franchise | Study Design | Bias | Main Findings |
| Bishai et al. 2008 | Pakistan | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client & provider survey | 2 | Cost per client in franchises lower than government facilities, higher than NGO and non-franchised private. Government facilities include tertiary care centers. |
| Huntington et al. 2012 | Myanmar | Reproductive & Child Health | Prospective Cohort | 2 | Provider net income increased over the 2-years after joining franchise network | |
| Shah et al. 2011 | Ethiopia | Reproductive Health | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 3 | In Ethiopia franchise clinics had the highest cost per client. In Pakistan there was no significant difference in cost per client between franchise clinics, government, and non-franchised private clinics. NGOs most cost-effective. |
Summary of Equity Findings.
| Study | Country | Health Area | Franchise | Study Design | Bias | Main Findings |
| Agha et al. 2003 | Nepal | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Pre/post client exit interviews | 3 | After introduction of the franchise the percentage of clients paying 109+ rupees increased from 13–22%. The number of clients reporting that the service costs were ‘moderate’ or ‘high’ increased from 51–96% |
| Berk and Adhvaryu 2012 | Kenya | Child Health | Cross-sectional analysis of DHS data | 4 | Access, as measured by proximity to franchise, did not vary by household wealth | |
| Bishai et al. 2008 | Pakistan | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 2 | Franchise clinics served lower percentage of poor households than non-franchised private providers, higher percentage of poor households than government facilities (gov′t facilities included tertiary care centers) |
| Hennink and Clements 2005 | Pakistan | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Quasi-Experimental | 6 | Among users of family planning services, women attending franchised clinics were wealthier than women using other sources for family planning. |
| Montagu et al. under review | Myanmar | Tuberculosis | Fractional | Cross-sectional analysis of TB case records | 3 | No significant difference between franchise clinics and national sample in percentage of patients in lowest two wealth quintiles. In urban areas, franchise clinics serve a higher proportion of poor clients. |
| O'Connell et al. 2011 | Myanmar | Reproductive health | Fractional | Qualitative focus groups with clients | N/A | Client focus groups report lower fees at franchised clinics than other private clinics |
| Shah et al. 2011 | Pakistan Ethiopia | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 3 | Franchises served fewer low-income people, as compared to public and NGO facilities in Pakistan, and compared to public and non-franchised private clinics in Ethiopia |
| Stephenson et al. 2004 | Pakistan Ethiopia India | Reproductive Health | Fractional | Cross-sectional client and provider survey | 3 | In Pakistan, higher income people more likely to attend franchised clinics. In Ethiopia and India, no association between client wealth and attendance at franchise clinics. |