| Literature DB >> 27648255 |
Isaac Holeman1, Tara Patricia Cookson2, Claudia Pagliari3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poor governance impedes the provision of equitable and cost-effective health care in many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Although systemic problems such as corruption and inefficiency have been characterized as intractable, "good governance" interventions that promote transparency, accountability and public participation have yielded encouraging results. Mobile phones and other Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) are beginning to play a role in these interventions, but little is known about their use and effects in the context of LMIC health care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27648255 PMCID: PMC5017033 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.06.020408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Differentiating “good–governance” from eGovernment and related terms*
| ICT for good governance | We use the term “ICTs for good governance” for interventions that involve ICTs, that are aligned with Sustainable Development Goal 16’s call for more transparent, accountable and participatory institutions [ |
| eGovernment | The term eGovernment refers broadly to the digitization of government services, often with a technical orientation toward improving efficiency or quality of services rather than the responsible exercise of power [ |
| Governance of eHealth / Health Information Governance | This literature has its origins in the large–scale implementation of information systems in health care, more recently including the use of mHealth and personal digital health devices. The storage, use and sharing of personal data in these new environments raises risks for information security and privacy, which have technological, legal/regulatory and ethical/societal implications. The word governance is often used to describe the policies and processes of oversight required to ensure the security and trustworthiness of such systems. It may also be used to refer to the management structures involved in collective oversight of eHealth initiatives. |
| Governance of health systems through information is another theme in this literature, concerning the best use of data for supporting health care planning, coordination, quality improvement and evaluation, in common with the “Learning Health Systems” concept [ | |
| Clinical governance | This term underscores continuous improvement of health care service quality [ |
| Participatory governance | This approach to governance emphasizes the strengthening of citizen voices, and particularly those of marginalized groups, in decision–making processes. Processes of deliberation, consultation and mobilization are particularly relevant [ |
| Global governance | This literature takes a macro perspective in studying worldwide governance of contemporary health issues. For instance, it is concerned with the role of international organizations in assisting countries to manage cross–border risks to public health security and support improvement of health outcomes [ |
| Recent work in this global governance vein has addressed the challenge of achieving the goal of “health for all by the year 2000” in a free market economy [ |
ICT – Information and communication technologies, NGO – non-governmental organization
*Includes terms most closely related to the review topic and not others such as corporate governance, which concerns companies.
Differences between comprehensive systematic reviews and scoping reviews*
| Comprehensive Systematic Review | Scoping Review |
|---|---|
| Focused research question with narrow parameters | Research question(s) often broad |
| Inclusion/exclusion defined at outset | Inclusion/exclusion developed post hoc |
| Study quality filters applied | Study quality not an initial priority |
| Detailed data extraction | May or may not involve data extraction |
| Quantitative synthesis often performed | Synthesis more likely to be qualitative/thematic |
| Formally assess the quality of studies and generate a conclusion relating to focused research question | Used to map the landscape of peer–reviewed research and gray literature, identify gaps and opportunities |
*Based on a Cochrane update by Armstrong et al [24].
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart illustrating the search process.
Figure 2Information and communication technologies (ICTs) used for health governance interventions.