| Literature DB >> 33115453 |
Jeffrey Braithwaite1, Charles Vincent2, Ezequiel Garcia-Elorrio3, Yuichi Imanaka4, Wendy Nicklin5, Sodzi Sodzi-Tettey6, David W Bates7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare is amongst the most complex of human systems. Coordinating activities and integrating newer with older ways of treating patients while delivering high-quality, safe care, is challenging. Three landmark reports in 2018 led by (1) the Lancet Global Health Commission, (2) a coalition of the World Health Organization, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the World Bank, and (3) the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine of the United States propose that health systems need to tackle care quality, create less harm and provide universal health coverage in all nations, but especially low- and middle-income countries. The objective of this study is to review these reports with the aim of advancing the discussion beyond a conceptual diagnosis of quality gaps into identification of practical opportunities for transforming health systems by 2030. MAIN BODY: We analysed the reports via text-mining techniques and content analyses to derive their key themes and concepts. Initiatives to make progress include better measurement, using the capacities of information and communications technologies, taking a systems view of change, supporting systems to be constantly improving, creating learning health systems and undergirding progress with effective research and evaluation. Our analysis suggests that the world needs to move from 2018, the year of reports, to the 2020s, the decade of action. We propose three initiatives to support this move: first, developing a blueprint for change, modifiable to each country's circumstances, to give effect to the reports' recommendations; second, to make tangible steps to reduce inequities within and across health systems, including redistributing resources to areas of greatest need; and third, learning from what goes right to complement current efforts focused on reducing things going wrong. We provide examples of targeted funding which would have major benefits, reduce inequalities, promote universality and be better at learning from successes as well as failures.Entities:
Keywords: Health systems; Low-, middle- and high-income countries; Patient safety; Quality of care; Universal health coverage
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33115453 PMCID: PMC7594452 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01739-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Synthesis of three reports—themes and concepts
Fig. 3Lancet report—themes and concepts
Fig. 5WHO/OECD/World Bank report—themes and concepts
Fig. 7National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report: Crossing the Global Quality Chasm: Improving Health Care Worldwide—themes and concepts
Fig. 2Synthesis of three reports—theme frequency summary
Fig. 4Lancet report—theme frequency summary
Fig. 6WHO/OECD/World Bank report—theme frequency summary
Fig. 8National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report—theme frequency summary
Wealth generated from 1% of per capita health spending in five selected OECD countries [13, 14]
| High-Income Country | Health spending (US dollars/capita), per annum | 1% of health spending in high-income countries (US dollars/capita), per annum | Population | Total ($US rounded) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | $10,586.08 | $105.86 | 327,167,434 | $34,633,944,563 |
| Japan | $4,766.07 | $47.66 | 126,529,100 | $6,030,376,906 |
| UK | $4,069.57 | $40.69 | 66,488,991 | $2,705,437,044 |
| Germany | $5,986.43 | $59.86 | 82,927,922 | $4,964,065,411 |
| Australia | $5,005.32 | $50.05 | 24,992,369 | $1,250,868,068 |
| Total |
Life-sustaining or quality-of-care-enhancing programs in nine selected lower-income countries [15–17]
| Low-income Country [ | Types of initiatives | Cost ($US) of program |
|---|---|---|
| Afghanistan | ||
| As a preventative approach to the high maternal and infant mortality rates in Afghanistan, this initiative funds midwifery training to improve equity and access to essential women’s healthcare in rural areas. | ||
| Burundi | ||
| Funds healthcare support, trauma healing workshops and AIDS testing to the Ntaseka Clinic, for more than 5000 people per annum. Patients include survivors of gender-based violence and abuse, people who are HIV positive, and the general population. | ||
| Chad | ||
| Funds quality programs to the Chadian youth; the programs which are peer-based, disseminate information about the risks of drugs, alcohol, and transmission of HIV/AIDS. | ||
| Ethiopia | ||
| Funds simple eye surgeries in Ethiopia, including remote Ethiopia, for those suffering from trachoma. The hope is to eradicate the eye disease. | ||
| Liberia | ||
| Funds community-based preventative care and an acute care clinic in Kakata to women and girls in Margibi County, Liberia. The clinic provides emergency care and has over 200,000 patients. | ||
| Malawi | ||
| This is the largest country program, and the first that employs and recruit’s HIV positive men as Expert Clients. There are over 270 Expert Clients in 98 clinics who support and educate other men in the area about HIV. | ||
| Nepal | ||
| “Fifty percent of Nepali children under five-years-old are malnourished … Malnutrition is the main cause of death for as many as 50,000 Nepali children each year.” This program funds Nutritional Rehabilitation homes to restore the health of child and educate parents of the risks. | ||
| Tanzania | ||
| Funds the construction, equipment and training of staff for a new maternity hospital in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. There will be 22 facilities and a 200-bed hospital to improve maternal health and assist with decreasing the high maternal mortality rate in Tanzania. | ||
| Uganda | ||
| Funds maternal health and welfare in Uganda and increases the quality of care for women in childbirth through effective equipment, training of midwives, social workers and radiographers and supporting outreach programs. |
[Source: GlobalGiving [15]]
Eight examples of country-level reform or improvement [7]
| Country | Key indicators | Initiative | Success features | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argentina | Population: 44,494,502 | • Financing by World Bank and national and provincial governments | • Unification of licencing rules | |
| GDP per capita, PPP: $20,567.30 | • External quality and patient safety evaluations | • Reduction of treatment variability | ||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 76.7 years | • Contribution from specialised scientific societies | • Healthcare coverage for pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum care and paediatric care | ||
| • Pay-for-performance strategy | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 7.5% | • Training initiatives on quality and patient safety | • Healthcare coverage for adolescents and women | ||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 40.6% | ||||
| Brazil | Population: 209,469,333 | • Organisation of website and editorial policy allowing for easy retrieval of information | • Provision of relevant and reliable QI information to consumers | |
| GDP per capita, PPP: $16,068.02 | ||||
| • Standardised terminology via a glossary of terms | • Increased access to QI information for health professionals and managers | |||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 75.7 years | ||||
| • Publications specify the relevance to the Brazilian context | ||||
| • Improved access to tools and strategies to support QI for health professionals | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 11.8% | • All materials are free to access | |||
| • Information accessible on tablets and mobile phones | ||||
| • Increased communication through social media platforms | ||||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 53.3% | ||||
| India | Population: 1.35 billion | • Support from private healthcare providers and insurance companies | • More accessible, affordable, safe and appropriate health services | |
| GDP per capita, PPP: $7761.60 | ||||
| • More than 50% of India’s population covered by health insurance | ||||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 68.8 years | ||||
| • Financial protection to families living below the poverty line | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 3.7% | ||||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 35.7 | ||||
| Jordan | Population: 9,956,011 | • Start-up funding from USAID | • Development of international accepted standards | |
| • Employee training though consultation and education departments | ||||
| GDP per capita, PPP: $9347.94 | • Development of health professionals’ capacity to improve quality and patient safety | |||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 74.5 years | • Application of a total quality management philosophy to encourage sustainable change | |||
| • Increased use of family planning methods by clients | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 5.5% | • More effective management of certain conditions, e.g. diabetes | |||
| • Improved leadership commitment, employee involvement and teamwork | ||||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 33.7 | ||||
| • Increased consumer satisfaction | ||||
| • Influenced the Ministry of Health to increase its Quality Department budget and personnel | ||||
| Rwanda | Population: 12,301,939 | • Nationwide initiative | • 90% coverage of population | |
| • Strong and sustained political commitment | ||||
| GDP per capita, PPP: $2253.52 | • Improved access to health services | |||
| • Financial investment from the government | ||||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 67.5 years | • Improvements in healthcare utilisation | |||
| • Legislative support | ||||
| • Consensus from the population that healthcare access should be equitable and affordable | • Reduction of financial catastrophe and impoverishment due to out-of-pocket costs | |||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 6.8% | ||||
| • Introduction of a stratification system based on individual assets | • Improvement of health indicators, e.g. reduced maternal mortality and under 5 years’ deaths | |||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 43.7 | ||||
| Spain | Population: 46,723,749 | • Existing legal, organisational and technical frameworks | • Increase in the number of patients receiving transplants | |
| GDP per capita, PPP: $40,854.58 | • Coordination of donor activities at the national, regional and hospital level | • Increased organ donation rates | ||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 83.3 years | • Highest deceased donation rates for a large country | |||
| • Employment of transplant coordinators to facilitate identification and referral of possible donors | ||||
| • Donation rates above that of the European Union or USA | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 9.0% | ||||
| • Training of professionals in organ donation | ||||
| • Development of a positive public attitude towards organ donation though mass media and an open communications policy | ||||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 36.2% | ||||
| • Hospital reimbursements for donations and transplantation activities | ||||
| Taiwan | Population: 23,508,428 | • Single-payer system | • Cost-effectiveness, e.g. reduction in administrative costs | |
| • Development of security mechanisms to protect consumers’ privacy and information | ||||
| GDP per capita, PPP: $47,800 | • More efficient, streamlined processes | |||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 80.1 years | • Improved quality of information | |||
| • Improved medication safety | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 6.2% | ||||
| • Enhanced collaboration and information transfer between providers | ||||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 33.8% | • Unified public health and clinical medicine information systems | |||
| • Engagement of consumers in their own care | ||||
| • Reduction of fraud | ||||
| • Continuity of care | ||||
| West Africa (Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone) | Total population: 24,883,449 | • Emphasis on recovery processes | • Knowledge sharing between | |
| GDP per capita, PPP: $1846.67* | • Systematic post-disaster needs assessments | • Ebola-affected countries | ||
| Life expectancy at birth (both sexes): 58.61* | • Focus on infection prevention and control, and health worker protection | • ‘Global pool of knowledge’ | ||
| • Demonstration of a model to combat Ebola with application to other infectious diseases | ||||
| Expenditure on health as a proportion of GDP: 10.54%* | • Community input | |||
| • Clearly articulated vision for universal health coverage | ||||
| • Strong leadership and guidance | ||||
| Estimated inequity, Gini Index: 33.6* |
*Data averaged across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone
All data are from the World Health Organization and World Bank. Available data used as at August 2019
GDP gross domestic product, PPP Purchasing Power Parity