| Literature DB >> 31080792 |
N'doh Ashken Sanogo1, Arone Wondwossen Fantaye1, Sanni Yaya2.
Abstract
Background: Universal Health Coverage (UHC) is achieved in a health system when all residents of a country are able to obtain access to adequate healthcare and financial protection. Achieving this goal requires adequate healthcare and healthcare financing systems that ensure financial access to adequate care. In Africa, accessibility and coverage of essential health services are very low. Many African countries have therefore initiated reforms of their health systems to achieve universal health coverage and are advanced in this goal. The aim of this paper is to examine the effects of UHC on equitable access to care in Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; access to care; equity; global health; health care reform; universal health coverage
Year: 2019 PMID: 31080792 PMCID: PMC6497736 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2019.00102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Systematic review inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Study Design | Regardless of methodology, qualifying studies: effect of Universal Health Coverage on equitable access to primary healthcare for vulnerable populations (indigent) in Africa; focused on factors influencing access to healthcare for vulnerable populations. | Letters, editorials, and narrative reviews will be excluded. |
| Participants | All studies addressing vulnerable populations' access to health care in Africa | Studies addressing access to health care by non-vulnerable populations in Africa; access to health care by vulnerable or non-vulnerable populations in high-income or developed countries. |
| Language | Studies reported in English and French | Other languages than English and French |
| Publication date | Jan 2005 to March 6, 2018 | Before Jan 2005 |
Figure 1Flow diagram of study selection process.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Amporfu ( | Ghana | This paper examines the vertical and horizontal equity of the premium collection scheme and the effect on the use of health services | Quantitative: Kakwani index method and graphical analysis | 24.9 million adults | Self-administered structured questionnaires on National Health Insurance Scheme members randomly selected from the two main cities in the country (Accra and Kumasi | High | Revenue collection was vertically and horizontally inequitable |
| Aryeetey et al. ( | Ghana | This paper analyses the costs and evaluate the equity, efficiency and feasibility of four strategies to identify poor households and their use of health services | Quantitative: households per setting with means testing as gold standard strategy | 145–147 households | Household survey in the central region of Ghana in June 2009 | High | Means testing was most efficient and equitable in rural and urban settings with low poverty incidence; the use of health services increases when fees are removed |
| Awoonor-Williams et al. ( | Ghana | This paper aims to get a better understanding of how Ghana health insurance institutions interact with stakeholders and the effect in the use of primary health care | Mixed methods: Qualitative and survey methods | Various stakeholders in six selected districts | Semi-structured interviews | Medium | For optimal use of primary health services, some imperfections have to be fixed (delays in reimbursements of claims for services provided by health care providers, inadequate coordination among stakeholders in primary healthcare delivery) |
| Bonfrer et al. ( | Ghana | This paper aims to evaluate the effects of Ghanaian Nation Health Insurance Scheme on maternal and infant healthcare use | Quantitative: statistical analysis | 4,916 women aged 15–49 | Household survey | High | All types of health care utilization included in this study is significantly higher among the insured. The scheme significantly increased the proportion of pregnancies with at least four ANC, and significant effect on attended deliveries |
| Campbell et al. ( | Brazil, Ghana, Mexico, Thailand | This paper explores the policy lessons on human resources for health (HRH) from four countries that have achieved sustained improvement in UHC | Analytical framework: Case studies (qualitative) | Human resources for health | Administrative data | Medium | HRH are critical to the expansion of health service coverage and the package of benefits, so users can be confident |
| Chirwa et al. ( | Malawi | This paper examined the features of services level agreements (SLA) and their effectiveness in expanding universal coverage. | Mixed methods | 155 clients | Interviews and surveys | Medium | SLA improves the use of health services, particularly for the vulnerable and underserved populations. However, various factors (lack of clear guidelines, late payment of bills, lack of transparency, inadequate human and material resources) affect SLAs performance |
| Dalinjong,et al. ( | Ghana | This paper examines the association between health insurance status and utilization of outpatient and inpatient health services in rural poor communities | Mixed methods: cross-sectional household survey and interviews | 11,175 households 55,992 household members | Interviews and surveys | High | Being insured is associated with increased utilization of outpatient and inpatient health services in the study area |
| Garchitorena et al. ( | Madagascar | This paper evaluates the impact of fee exemption in a rural area of Madagascar | Quantitative sectional household survey | 1,522 households | Population and health system data | High | One-third of the needy have access to health care when fees are in place. However, when fees were removed, the use of health care increased by 65% for all patients, 52% for children under five and over 25% for maternity consultations |
| Kouanda et al. ( | Burkina Faso | This paper aims to identify factors associated with home births in the Kaya health district where child delivery was free of charge | Mixed methods: interviews and statistical analysis | 60,587 persons i.e., 8,825 households | Semi-structured interviews and administrative data | High | Key factors associated with home birth were age, distance from the household to the primary health centers, previous experience of giving birth at home, negative experiences with health centers, fear of cesarean delivery, and lack of transport. |
| Nyandekwe et al. ( | Rwanda | This paper aims to assess Rwanda UHC | Quantitative: SWOT analysis | Rwanda national population | SWOT analysis from national retrospective review applied to six metrics as key indicators of UHC achievement related to WHO definition | High | 96.15% of overall health insurance coverage, 1.07 visit per capita per year vs. 1 visit recommended by WHO. Rwanda UHC achievements are objectively convincing |
| O'Connell et al. ( | Ghana, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Rwanda | This paper focuses on exploring the nature and extent of non-financial access barriers to care | Mixed methods: Literature review and household survey data | Published literature and household survey data | Surveys and literature | Medium | Barriers: ethnicity, religion, physical accessibility, decision-making, gender and autonomy, and knowledge, information |
| Were et al. ( | Kenya | This paper evaluates the association of health insurance with access and utilization of obstetric delivery services. | Quantitative statistical analysis | 4,082 pregnant women | Demographic and Health Survey | High | Mothers with insurance have 23% points more likely to deliver at an institution and 20% more likely to have access to skilled birth attendants compared to those not insured |