| Literature DB >> 31478022 |
Anna Palagyi1, Rebecca Dodd1, Stephen Jan1,2, Devaki Nambiar3,4, Rohina Joshi1,2,3, Maoyi Tian4,5, Seye Abimbola1,2, David Peiris1.
Abstract
Health system planners in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) of the Asia-Pacific region seeking to reorient primary health care (PHC) systems to achieve universal health coverage may be hindered by lack of knowledge of what works in their setting. With limited resources for research available, it is important to identify evidence-based strategies for reorganising PHC delivery, determine where relevant evidence gaps exist and prioritise these for future study. This paper describes an approach for doing this using the best available evidence combined with consultation to establish evidence priorities. We first reviewed PHC organisational interventions in Asia-Pacific LMICs and ascertained evidence gaps. The largest gaps related to interventions to promote access to essential medicines, patient management tools, effective health promotion strategies and service planning and accountability. Evidence from Pacific Island countries was particularly scant. We then engaged an expert panel of 22 PHC stakeholders from seven Asia-Pacific LMICs in a Delphi exercise to identify priority questions for future research. Research priorities were: (1) identifying effective PHC service delivery models for chronic diseases; (2) devising sustainable models of disease integration; (3) optimising task shifting; (4) understanding barriers to care continuity; (5) projecting future PHC needs; and (6) designing appropriate PHC service packages. Notably, stakeholder-determined priorities reflected large, context-dependent system issues, while evidence gaps centred on discrete interventions. Future research on the organisation of PHC services in Asia-Pacific LMICs should incorporate codesign principles to engage researchers and national PHC system stakeholders, and innovative methods that build on existing evidence and account for system complexity.Entities:
Keywords: Asia-Pacific; health systems; low- and middle-income countries; primary health care; research priorities
Year: 2019 PMID: 31478022 PMCID: PMC6703300 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Framework of primary health care (PHC) system inputs and outcomes used to guide the coding of evidence on the organisation of PHC service delivery in the Asia-Pacific region.
Figure 2Evidence gap map of the organisation of primary health care (PHC) service delivery in the Asia-Pacific region, derived from the systematic review by Dodd et al.22 Numbers represent total articles addressing each PHC input and outcome; the bar graph in each cell provides a visual representation of evidence counts.
Country of work and professional background of 22 Delphi expert panel members
| Country | Professional role | Expertise |
| Bangladesh | 1 Academic/research | Other |
| Fiji | 1 Government (national) | Planning/management; clinical |
| India | 1 Aid/development | Budgeting/financing; planning/management; programme management; clinical; human resources; service delivery |
| Indonesia | 1 Academic/research | Epidemiology; evaluation |
| Malaysia | 2 Academic/research | Clinical; service delivery; epidemiology; evaluation |
| Philippines | 1 Government (national) | Budgeting/financing; health systems; UHC |
| Vietnam | 1 Academic/research | Budgeting/financing; planning/management; programme management; clinical; human resources; service delivery |
| Regional | 5 Aid/development | Budgeting/financing; planning/management; programme management; human resources; service delivery; monitoring and evaluation |
NGO, non-government organisation; UHC, universal health coverage.
Figure 3Expert panel prioritisation of broad research topics within the organisation of primary health care service delivery. The top three priority areas are in orange and commonly identified research interests for each area are listed. NPHW, non-physician health workers.
‘Top 10’ research priorities for the organisation of primary healthcare services, identified by the Delphi expert panel*
| Rank | Research question | Relevant PHC system input categories | Gap identified in evidence review? |
| 1 | What is the most effective and sustainable PHC service delivery model for the management of chronic diseases in a resource-constrained setting? | All input categories | ✗ |
| 2 | What are sustainable models of disease integration that would (A) make best use of existing vertical programmes, and (B) strengthen PHC? | Planning and accountability | ✗ |
| 3 | How can task shifting (eg, use of non-physician health workers) be used to support the delivery of PHC? | Service delivery | ✗ |
| 4 | How can we address the different barriers to continuity of patient care in urban and rural/remote areas? | Service delivery | ✓ |
| 5 | How can we project the PHC needs of the future? | Planning and accountability | ✓ |
| 6 | What package of PHC services is the most effective and appropriate for the population? | Service delivery | ✓ |
| 7 | What is the impact on the well-being, motivation and workload of community health workers when integrating a new PHC programme? | Workforce development | ✓ |
| 8 | What is the optimum mix of health workers at PHC level? | Service delivery | ✓ |
| 9 | How do we ensure that essential drugs and diagnostics are always available in PHC services? | Essential medicines, vaccines and technologies | ✓ |
| 10 | How can we best integrate primary, secondary and tertiary care across the health sector? | Planning and accountability | ✓ |
*The Delphi expert panel comprised 15 stakeholders from seven Asia-Pacific low- and middle-income countries (as listed in table 1) in addition to seven stakeholders with experience of primary health care services at a regional level.
PHC, primary health care.