| Literature DB >> 32513131 |
Nahitun Naher1, Roksana Hoque2, Muhammad Shaikh Hassan2, Dina Balabanova3, Alayne M Adams4, Syed Masud Ahmed2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The dynamic intersection of a pluralistic health system, large informal sector, and poor regulatory environment have provided conditions favourable for 'corruption' in the LMICs of south and south-east Asia region. 'Corruption' works to undermine the UHC goals of achieving equity, quality, and responsiveness including financial protection, especially while delivering frontline health care services. This scoping review examines current situation regarding health sector corruption at frontlines of service delivery in this region, related policy perspectives, and alternative strategies currently being tested to address this pervasive phenomenon.Entities:
Keywords: Frontline health care providers; Frontline health care services; Good governance; Health-sector corruption; LMICs; UHC
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32513131 PMCID: PMC7278189 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-08975-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Literature review protocol
| To understand current scenario and policy perspective in selected countries of the south and south-east Asia region to address irregularities and informal practices in the public sector frontline (PHC) health care facilities | ||
| To identify different types of irregularities and informal practices perpetrated by the frontline health care service provider in countries of south and south-east Asia | ||
| To explore different innovative approaches practiced in this region to address irregularities and informal practices. | ||
| What are the different types of irregular and informal practices perpetrated by the frontline health care service providers in the public sector? | ||
| What motivates them to engage in corrupt practices? | ||
| What are the conditions that incentivize corrupt behavior among them? | ||
| Which anti-corruption initiatives promote transparency and accountability among public sector health care providers? | ||
| How does the legal and regulatory framework promote or constrain corrupt practices by these providers? | ||
| Inclusion Criteria | Peer-reviewed, full-text articles, all methods, all design, written in English | |
| Policy data involved with health sector corruption and governance from central to community | ||
| Grey materials (published and/or unpublished) | ||
| Exclusion criteria | Corruption related literature not with a reference or focus on health sector | |
| Time frame | January 2007 to August 2017 | |
| Selected south and south-east Asian LMICs | Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Vietnam, Philippines | |
| Electronic database | PubMed, SCOPUS and Google Scholar | |
| Grey literature | National Bangla & English newspaper articles; Health related blog in English and Bangla; Books/ Monograph/ dissertation/ conference paper/conference proceedings | |
| Organizational website | The World Bank, Anti-corruption Resource Centre, Transparency International Bangladesh, Center for Global Development, CHR Michelson Institute, WHO, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW), Director General of Health Services (DGHS), Director General of Family Planning (DGFP), | |
| Journal’s website | PLoS ONE, BioMed Central, Lancet, Health Policy and Planning etc. | |
Key terms used for searching electronic databases
| Corruption (combined by ‘OR’) (a) | Governance/accountability (combined by ‘OR’) (b) | Health sector (combined by ‘OR’) (c) | Geographic location (combined by ‘OR’) (d) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Corrupt | Governance | Hospital | Bangladesh |
| Bribery | Good governance | Health care center | Bhutan |
| Dishonesty | Accountability | Health facilities | India |
| Anti-corrupt | Community accountability | Health service | Indonesia |
| Tackle corrupt | Health worker | Myanmar | |
| Combat corrupt Anti-corrupt strategy | Frontline health care provider | Nepal | |
| Rent seeking behavior | Manager | Sri Lanka | |
| Informal payment | Administrator | Philippines | |
| Informal practice | Service provider | Vietnam | |
| Illegal practice | LMICs | ||
| Elicit practice | LICs | ||
| Speed up money |
Note: a,b,c,d groups were combined with Boolean operator ‘AND’
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram
Themes and sub-themes for framework analysis
| Themes | Sub-themes | Example of codes used |
|---|---|---|
• Different forms of corruption • Corruption practices • Conditions that incentivize corruption • Impact of corruption and organizations that promote corruption | • Bribery, informal payment, absenteeism, medicine irregularities • Administrative practice, pharmaceuticals, diagnostic practice, service delivery related practice • Medical education, career prospect, informal payment • Use of resources, access & utilization of services, | |
• Transparency and accountability • Citizen participation • Anti-corruption initiatives • Laws and regulations of anti-corruption | • Community ownership, patient welfare society, hospital management committee, policies to combat corruption |
Summary of studies exploring different dimensions of ‘corruption’ (n = 15)
| Author; year [ref] | Type of study | Settings | Themes/sub-themes | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mannan MA; 2013 [ | Survey using both quantitative and qualitative methods | Nationally representative sample from seven divisions included 14 district and 28 sub-district hospitals and 28 union hospitals in Bangladesh | Informal payment/hospital admission | • Informal payments to facility staff (mainly non-technical) hastened the process of getting admission in a public health facility • About 1/3rd of inpatients in district hospital and 1/5th in sub-district hospitals made an extra payment for getting admission; 8% of them made extra-payments at least three times and occurred more for the poor as they had no connection to or recommendation from influential people • In FGDs, 50% of the participants said that they made informal payments because they feared that without these extra payments’ they would either receive no treatment at all or would be subjected to neglect/slow treatment. |
| Paredes-Solís et al.; 2011 [ | Mixed methods | South Asia (and Africa and Europe) | Informal payment/ impact | • It causes disproportionate financial burden to the poor households due to paying for supposedly free services and non-availability of medicines in hospitals • • |
| Lewis M; 2007 [ | Review | LMICs | Informal payment/ causes and impact | • Informal payment is quite common in south/south-east Asia e.g., Pakistan (96%), Bangladesh (60%), India (24%), Cambodia (55%), Vietnam (81%). • • |
| Stepurko et al.; 2010 [ | A systematic review of research methods and instruments | 39 countries including LMICs | Informal payment | • Methodologically, self-administered questionnaires were found to be suitable in a face-to-fact interview for collecting information of sensitive nature such as informal payment |
| Matsushima M & Yamada H; 2016 [ | Cross-sectional study; household survey | Ho Chi Minh city and Hanoi, Vietnam | Bribery/ causes and impact | • Bribery is common in instances such as enrolling members in health insurance schemes, provision of certain services, bypassing queue to reduce waiting time, transfer and posting of choice, taking unlawful leave etc. • Bribery is negatively correlated with health outcomes and insurance coverage • • |
| Nguyen VH; 2008 [ | Survey Data | 36,000 Households in Vietnam | Bribery | • Social interactions in the form of advice on choice of a hospital for a particular service leads to an increase in the propensity to bribe and the amount of bribe. |
| Azfar O &Gurgu, T; 2005 [ | Quantitative Survey | 1100 households and 160 health workers from 80 municipalities in 19 provinces of Philippines | Bribery/ impact | • Bribery reduces immunization coverage, delays newborn vaccination, increases waiting time and discourages public health series • • Affects of corruption vary by region (rural or urban), and also, affects the poor disproportionately |
| Abdallah W et al.; 2015 [ | IZA discussion paper | 12,240 Households in Bangladesh | Bribery/ causes and impact | • 41% patients pay illegal consultation fees in public sector health facilities; patients who were living further away from the health facilities, were paying more bribe • • |
| Azad A; 2014 [ | Blog (Bangladesh health sector) | Survey from 28 health institutions | Bribery/impact | • Bribe was paid during recruitment of ad hoc doctors, 3rd – 4th class employees, transfer posting from Upazila to capital etc. • Doctors earned money from commission agreements with diagnostic centers thereby driving up costs of care etc. |
| Nanjunda;2014 [ | A cross-sectional survey, informal interview, and participant observation | 30 selected Community Health Centers (CHCs) in South Karnataka | Absenteeism/ causes and impact | • Unauthorized absence is more prevalent among doctors (27%), followed by lab technicians (17%) and female nurses (13%); mostly in the afternoon and around weekends (17%); 76% of doctors were engaged in private practices or running their clinics • |
| Ramadhan and Santoso; 2015 [ | Quantitative survey | 9 community health centers in Benkulu city, Indonesia | Absenteeism/ causes and impact | • Unauthorized absence is found to be 26.5% among Doctors, followed by 23% among midwives and 23% among para-medics • • |
| Lewis, M; 2006 [ | CGD Brief Report | LMICs | Absenteeism/ causes and impact | • Absenteeism rate among health workers was 19% (Papua New Guinea) to 75% (Bangladesh) • • |
| McDevitt et al.; 2015 [ | Anti-corruption Resource Centre Document | Bangladesh | Absenteeism | • Absenteeism rates in primary health care centres in Bangladesh to be as high as 35% • The regulatory framework for monitoring health service delivery is weak, with 45 separate laws related to various aspects of health |
| Knox C; 2009 [ | Quantitative survey | 5000 household survey in 52 districts govt. facilities in Bangladesh | Absenteeism/Negligence | • 42% of the patients encountered corruption while accessing services and 43% faced negligence by professionals, disproportionally affecting the poorest disproportionately • |
| Hipgrave and Hort; 2014 [ | Review | LMICs of south/south-east Asia | Absenteeism/dual practice | • ‘Dual practice’ by health professionals is quite common in south/south-east Asia (e.g., in Bangladesh it is cited to be around 80% while in Indonesia from 70 to 80%) • Poor regulation of dual practice encourages absenteeism and negatively affects access, quality and equity of services provided |
Summary of studies exploring different dimensions of ‘Governance’ (n = 18)
| Author, year (country) | Type of study | Settings | Themes/sub-themes covered | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rose J et al., 2014 [ | Systematic review | Bangladesh health sector since 2000 | Transparency /accountability: public sector | • Some pertinent governance issues included corruption of inventory management, high rate of absenteeism of health care service providers and problems of human resource management • There is limited transparency in government regarding basic data e.g., procurement procedures at the national level • public doctors unnecessarily refer patients to private clinics or practices. |
| Nurunnabi M and Islam SK, 2011 [ | Survey and Secondary research | 533 patients from 45 hospitals in Dhaka city of Bangladesh were surveyed using questionnaire | Transparency/ accountability: private sector | • In the private health care sector, four factors were found to be significantly associated with accountability, in order of influence: professionals, administration and management, legal enforcement and ethics, and government |
| Ghimire, J et al.; 2013 [ | Qualitative study | 90 health facilities in Siraha, Bardiya and Doti districts in Nepal | Transparency /accountability: display of information | • Only 49 (54%) of the health facilities have properly displayed signboard, 42 (47%) citizen charter, 36 (40%) free health services and Information on Aama program in 25 (28%) health facilities. • 72 out of 90 health facilities have not displayed social audit reports, and 80 (89%) of the health facilities have not maintained complaint box. |
| Dieleman, M et al.; 2011 [ | Review of case studies | A literature review of HRH management in LMICs; case studies identified through Scopus, PubMed, Embase | Transparency /accountability: managing HRH | • The review covered four dimensions of governance: performance, equity and equality, partnership, and oversight • In ‘oversight,’ local-level corruption affects accountability and local-level trust in governance • Experiences with accountability mechanisms for HRH policy development and implementation were lacking. |
| Kamal S et al.; 2014 [ | Qualitative study using In-depth interviews, KII group discussion and secondary data | Public and private health care institutions in Bangladesh | Transparency /accountability: HRH | • 20% of total sanctioned post is vacant. Doctors do not have to be accountable for not attending the office on time. • The procedures of promotion, selection grade, and regularizing ‘In Charge’ positions are quite lengthy in the health sector. • Political pressures and influences are very prevalent when medical certificates on death and injuries are badly needed for filing police cases. |
| Garimella, S and Sheikh, K; 2016 [ | Case studies on posting and transfer | Primary health care center in Tamil Nadu, India | Transparency /accountability: HRH | • Posting and transfer emerge as a complex phenomenon, shaped partially by the laws of the state and partially as a parallel system of norms and incentives requiring consideration and coordination of the interests of different groups. • Beyond a functional perspective of PT, it also reflects justice and fairness as it plays out in the health system. |
| Cleary, S et al.; 2013 [ | Descriptive literature review | Review of PubMed literature in LMICs | Accountability: citizen participation | • Bureaucratic accountability mechanisms often constrain the functioning of external accountability mechanisms. • Citizen participation: community members are behaving like “watchdogs;” external supervision by community people can play a role for functioning external accountability mechanism. |
| Papp, S et al.; 2013 [ | Case study | Civil society organizations in Orissa, India | Accountability: citizen participation | • Public hearings as a social accountability tool facilitate: (1) demand generation for better services, (2) leveraging intermediaries to legitimize demands of poor and marginalized women, and (3) sensitizing leaders and health care providers to women’s needs • The process involves raising critical consciousness among marginalized women and giving space to voice their concerns and demands to people in power and also, receptivity of the latter to hear their grievances and act on these |
| Roalkvam, S; 2014 [ | Review | India | Accountability: citizen participation | • Rights of citizens are not solely contingent upon the existence of legally guaranteed rights but also significantly on the social conditions that make their effective exercise possible. |
| Lodenstein, E et al.; 2017 [ | Review | 37 social accountability initiatives in LMICs identified through a literature search | Accountability: citizen participation | • Perspectives of providers to citizen’s expectations and demands for better health care is essential for improving the quality of primary health care in different settings • Providers’ ‘receptivity’ to such demands expectations and their ‘relation’ to citizens for tapping personal and professional support for improved responsiveness can be understood and acted upon following a Context-Mechanism-Outcome theory of change |
| Islam MS and Ullah MW; 2009 [ | Mixed method using case study approach | Muradnagarupazila health complex, Comilla, Bangladesh | Accountability: citizen participation | • Peoples’ have no involvement in decision making process in the health sector • Lack of proper economic management is hampering the participation of people in health services. |
| Regmi, K et al.; 2010 [ | Review | Medline, PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, DARE literature review from Nepal | Decentralization | • Decentralization of health sector implies increased accessibility of the public to health services by increasing transparency and accountability • The restructuring of the district health care services from decentralization was considered the highest achievement for meeting the needs of the local community. • Decentralization is diverting the attention of the public away from central bureaucratic rules and gained popularity by installing local governments at the lower level. |
| Panda, B, and Thakur, H; 2016 [ | Review | Focused literature review from India using PubMed and Google Scholar | Decentralization | • For exploring effects of decentralization, one needs to examine and assess the role and functions of local decision-making institutions and results thereof at institutions, systems, and individual levels • Decentralization of local self-governance in public health sector has multiple dimensions in conceptualization, measurement complexities, and byproducts for consideration. |
| Gurung, G, and Tuladhar, S; 2013 (Nepal) [ | Quantitative study | 28 districts | Decentralization | • Local health facility management committee ensured community engagement, mobilization of local resources, improved responsiveness and accountability to the community, and provision of inclusive health services • Availability of technical staff, supervision, and monitoring, and display of citizen charter improved accountability. |
| Rauniyar G et al., 2013 [ | Performance Evaluation report | Indonesia; evaluation of ADB funded decentralized health services project | Decentralization | • Improved access to health care services, especially in remote and rural areas; the poor benefitted the most • Service delivery constrained by limited funding with a major proportion spent on administration • Continuous monitoring is essential for identifying current trends of decentralization |
| Millington KA and Bhardwaj M; 2017 [ | Report | LMICs including India, Bangladesh | Good governance | • To address corruption in pharmaceutical procurement, drug pricing transparency is mandatory for good governance through drug pricing information from a govt. online database. |
| Roncarati, M; 2010 [ | Review of examples | LMICs | Good governance | • Weak institutional capacities hinder good governance and better health outcome. • Generate awareness among stakeholders, supportive institutional structures, incentives and payment schemes enhance good governance |
| Huss, R et al.; 2010 (India) [ | Qualitative study/ 44 semi-structured interviews | Government hospitals in urban and rural areas of Karnataka; | Good governance | • Good governance is the responsibility of all citizens for a responsive and inclusive health systems with fair outcomes • To combat corruption effectively, committed and powerful leadership, adequate resource and capacity to investigate senior government officials, and institutional reforms are needed • Concerted efforts from political and justice systems, media and awareness-building among the population is essential to succeed in anti-corruption actions |
Summary of policies related to prevention of corruption in the LMICs of south and south-east Asian countries
| Country, year (Ref) | Name of policy | Key feature |
|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh, 2008 [ | Right to Information Act | • Every citizen of Bangladesh shall have the right to information from the authority, and the authority shall, on demand from a citizen, be bound to provide him with the information. • Every authority shall prepare catalogue and index of all information and preserve it in an appropriate manner. |
| India, 2005 [ | • An Indian citizen can apply for and obtain information held by any public authority, subject to certain defined exceptions in respect of national interest, legislative privilege and right to privacy. | |
| Nepal, 2007 [ | • Every citizen of Nepal shall have access to the information held in the public bodies. • • The whistleblower shall not be terminated from his/her post or punished with any legal responsibility or caused any loss or harm for giving information. | |
| Sri Lanka, 2016 [ | • An act to provide for the right of access to information; to specify grounds on which access may be denied; to establish the right to information commission; to appoint information officers; to set out the procedure and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto. | |
| Bangladesh, 2011 [ | The Whistle Blower Protection Act | • If any whistleblower discloses any authentic information, his identity cannot not be divulged without his consent. • For making disclosure of public interest information, no criminal or civil, or departmental suit can be filed against the whistleblower. • If the whistleblower is a service holder, only for disclosing public interest information- demotion, harassment transfer or forced retirement or any other measures cannot be taken against him that would incur loss of his psychological, financial or social standing or no departmental actions can be taken against him or he cannot be treated discriminatorily. |
| India, 2014 [ | • Establish a mechanism to safeguard persons who make a complaint regarding an act of corruption | |
| India, 2013 [ | Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act | • Lokpal and Lokayuktas bodies have been empowered to investigate allegations of corruption against public functionaries. • The jurisdiction of the Lokpal (Ombudsman) includes the prime minister, ministers, members of parliament and other public servants. |
| India, 2013 [ | Prevention of Corruption (amendment) Bill | • The Amendment Bill include the offense of passive bribery, its various aspects including solicitation and acceptance of bribe through intermediaries (private persons). |