| Literature DB >> 33168062 |
Md Zabir Hasan1, Shalini Singh2, Dinesh Arora2, Nishant Jain3, Shivam Gupta2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Integrated care is a people-centered health delivery approach that ensures the comprehensiveness, quality, and continuity of service across the settings and levels of health systems. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends integration across levels and building-blocks of health systems as a prerequisite of Universal Health Coverage (UHC). While health systems of low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are often fragmented and led by siloed service delivery structure, several LMICs-including India-have attempted health system integration. Several systematic reviews of evidence on healthcare integration from developed countries exist, but no synthesis from LMICs was reported to date. This review will overview the existing evidence of primary-secondary care integration (PSI) in the context of LMICs, aiming to support policy decisions for the effective integration of health delivery systems in India.Entities:
Keywords: Ayushman Bharat; Health systems; India; Integrated care; Integrated primary-secondary care; Low- and middle-income countries; Scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33168062 PMCID: PMC7654598 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-01514-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Complexity of vertical integration within health systems
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the record selection process
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Concept | • Integrated primary-secondary health care model | • Article lacking evidence or discussion on the primary-secondary care integration (Example: A study may report the prevalence of obesity-related comorbidity and then recommending an integrated primary-secondary health care model as a recommendation. This will be excluded during the selection process) |
| Context and population | • 31 low-income countries and 47 lower-middle-income countries based on the World Bank's classificationa | |
| Document type | • Peer-reviewed journal articles • Grey literature (such as policy brief or programmatic reports) • Quantitative, qualitative, mixed or multimethod research, policy analysis, methodology paper | • Chart reviews, opinion papers, case reports, editorials • Conference proceedings and posters |
| Time frame | • 2000 - 2020 | |
| Reporting characteristics | • Articles are written in English • Complete articles that have been published | • Article not published in English |
https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/articles/906519-world-bank-country-and-lending-groups
aCountries Gross domestic product (GDP) less than $3995
Summary of the data extraction form to chart the evidence
| Data extraction themes | Extracted data |
|---|---|
| Study characteristics | Source |
| Title | |
| Authors | |
| Year | |
| Country name | |
| Country type (World Bank’s classificationa) | |
| WHO region | |
| Study populations | |
| Study location | |
| Study design and methodology | |
| Scoping review specific | Definition of integrated care |
| Typologies of integration | |
| Type of service integrated (if applicable) | |
| Health systems building blocks integrated (if applicable) | |
| Mechanism of integration (if applicable) | |
| Structure of integration (if applicable) | |
| Intensity of integration (if applicable) | |
| Organizational and operational components | |
| Success | |
| Facilitators | |
| Bottlenecks | |
| Unintended consequences |
https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/articles/906519-world-bank-country-and-lending-groups
aCountries Gross domestic product (GDP) less than $3995