| Literature DB >> 33674267 |
Emily Susannah Grace Hulse1, Rifat Atun2, Barbara McPake3, John Tayu Lee3,4.
Abstract
There is an interest to understand how social impact bonds (SIBs), a type of innovative financing instrument used in impact investment, can be used to finance the prevention of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This is the first scoping review that explores the evidence of SIBs for NCDs and their key characteristics and performance. The review used both published and grey literature from eight databases (MEDLINE, NCBI, Elsevier, Cochrane Library, Google, Google Scholar, WHO publications and OECD iLibrary). A total of 83 studies and articles were eligible for inclusion, identifying 11 SIBs implemented in eight countries. The shared characteristics of the SIBs used for NCDs were impact investment companies as investors, local governments as outcome payers, not-for-profit service providers and an average US$2 015 456 private initial investment. The review revealed a lack of empirical evidence on SIBs for NCDs. Conflict of interest and lack of public disclosure were common issues in both the published and grey literature on SIBs. Furthermore, only three SIBs implemented for financing NCDs were meeting all their target outcomes. The common characteristics of the SIBs meeting their target outcomes were evidence-based interventions, multiple service providers and an intermediated structure. Overall, there is a need for more high-quality studies, particularly economic evaluations and qualitative studies on the benefits to target populations, and greater transparency from the private sector, in order to ensure improved SIBs for preventing NCDs. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: health policy; health systems
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33674267 PMCID: PMC7938989 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-004127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram for the scoping review process.78 SIB, social impact bonds; NCD, non-communicable disease; PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.
A summary of the key characteristics of all the SIBs for NCDs
| Name | Cause | Intervention | Financial terms | Service provider | Intermediary | Outcome payer | Evaluator |
| Canada’s Community Hypertension Prevention Initiative | Hypertension | Online health learning platform with support from dietitians, personal health coaches, membership to health and fitness centres. | 6.7% return if targets are met. | Heart and Stroke Foundation | MaRS Centre for Impact Investing | Public Health Agency of Canada | Social Research and Demonstration Corporation |
| Fresno’s Asthma Impact Model (AIM4Fresno) | Chronic asthma | In-home care initiatives and education to reduce exposure to indoor environmental asthma triggers. | 8.2% return by 2015 return if targets are met. | Central California Asthma Collaborative and Clinica Sierra Vista | Social Finance USA and Collective Health | Undisclosed. | Ian Duncan at The University of California, Santa Barbara |
| Newcastle’s Ways to Wellness | Long-term conditions | Community-based social prescribing which included identifying health and well-being goals and increasing access to community and voluntary groups and resources with a non-medical link worker. | 1.38 times the initial investment return if targets are met. | First Contact Clinical Mental Health Concern, HealthWORKS Newcastle, Changing Lives. | Bridges Fund Management | Cabinet Office Social Outcomes Fund and the Newcastle West Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG). | The Institute of Health and Society at Newcastle University |
| Haringey, Staffordshire and Tower Hamlets’ Mental Health Employment Partnership | Mental health | Individual placement support service model and principles, where an employment advisor is embedded in local mental health professional teams. | 8% return return if targets are met. | Twining Enterprise, Making Space, and Working Well Trust | Social Finance UK | Cabinet Office Social Outcomes Fund, Haringey Council and CCG, Tower Hamlets CCG, Staffordshire County Council and CCGs, and Commissioning Better Outcomes Fund | Commissioning Better Outcomes Fund Evaluation, by Ecorys and Answer the Question (ATQ) Consultants |
| New South Wales’ (NSW) Resolve | Mental health | Recovery-based community support programme, encompassing intensive residential care and support at Resolve centres with peer-workers, collaboration with clinical services in Local Health Districts. | 7.5% per annum return return if targets are met. | Flourish Australia (also known as RichmondPR). | Social Ventures Australia | Government of NSW, Ministry of Health acting through the Health Administration Corporation (HAC). | Urbis |
| Hachioji’s SIB | Colorectal Cancer | Machine learning or artificial intelligence to make recommendation on Hachioji City residents to undergo colorectal cancer screened. | Undisclosed return. | Cancer Scan | k-three | Hachioji City | Tokyo Institute of Technology, Cancer Scan and University of Tokyo |
| Kobe’s SIB | Preventing severe diabetic nephropathy | A 6-month project on health and dietary guidance to high-risk individuals. | 5% return return if targets are met. | Disease Prevention Program (DPP) Health Partners | Social Impact Investment Foundation | Kobe City | Institute for Future Engineering |
| Netherlands Cancer and Work Health Impact Bond | Cancer | Intensive programme of physical and mental exercise at home and at work. | Maximum outcome payment: €0.77M. | ArboNed (occupational health and safety service). | Undisclosed | De Amersfoortse (insurer) | Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) and Tilburg University |
| Devon’s Healthier Devon | Diabetes | A 2-year lifestyle behavioural change (exercise and diet/nutrition) programme for high-risk prediabetics. | Maximum outcome payment: £774 068 Total | Westbank Community Health and Care (Devon based charity). | No intermediary, used Westbank for coordination. | Devon County Council and Commission Better Outcomes Fund | University of the West of England. |
| Israel | Diabetes | Personalised intervention pf lifestyle changes (motivational, nutritional, technological and physical activity). | Maximum outcome payment: undisclosed. | B-well | Social Finance Israel | Israeli Health Maintenance Organisations (Clalit and Leumit) and the National Insurance Institute | Social Finance Israel |
| Auckland Mental Health SIB | Mental health | Holistic service for those with mental health conditions to find and sustain employment, through support and screenings. | 9% maximum return for class A (lower risk), 17% for class B (higher risk). | Advanced Personal Management (APM) Workcare. | Undisclosed | New Zealand Ministry of Social Development. | Undisclosed |
NCD, non-communicable disease; SIB, social impact bond.
The investment of each SIBs for NCD, by type, name, amount in 2019 US dollars and local currency
| SIB | Investor type | Investor names | Investment/initial capital (expressed in 2019 US dollars) | Investment/initial capital (expressed in local currency) |
| Canada’s Community Hypertension Prevention Initiative | Foundations, individuals, institutional investors (insurance, investment, or venture capital companies) | QBE Insurance Group, RBC Generator, TELUS Ventures, Bealight Foundation, J.W. McConnell Family Foundation, Max Bell Foundation, Mindset Foundation, Catherine Donnelly Foundation, Doboto, Frederik Hyndman, Illumina Partners, Andrew Cockwell, Ian Cockwell, and Guy M. Beaudin. | US$2 308 224 | $C2 900 000. |
| Fresno’s Asthma Impact Model(AIM4Fresno) | Private foundation | California Endowment | US$1 207 185 for the extension. | US$1 100 000 for extension. |
| Newcastle’s Ways to Wellness | Institutional investor (impact investment company) | Bridges Funds Management. | US$2 735 666 | £1 650 000. |
| Haringey, Staffordshire and Tower Hamlets’ Mental Health Employment Partnership | Institutional investor (leading social investment company in the UK) | Big Issue Invest. | US$605 207 | £400 000. |
| New South Wales’ (NSW) Resolve | High net worth individuals, foundations, institutional investors (superannuation companies) | NGS Super, | US$5 500 493 | $A7 000 000. |
| Hachioji | Institutional investors (impact investing company, venture capital firms, major bank) | Social Impact Investment Foundation (SIIF), Digisearch and Advertising and Mizuho Bank. | US$82 801 | ¥8 874 000. |
| Kobe | Institutional investors (impact investing company, major bank) and individual investors. | SIIF, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation and anonymous individual investors. | US$286 609 | ¥31 140 000 |
| Netherland’s Cancer and Work | Institutional investors (bank, venture philanthropy fund). | ABN AMRO Social Impact Fund. | US$775 513 | €0.64 million capital raised |
| Devon | Institutional investor (impact investment company). | Bridges Fund Management | US$1 421 209 | £1.047 million |
| Israel | Intuitional investors (investment funds, bank, philanthropic funds), individuals, software technology company. All coordinated by the Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS Banking). | Bank Hapoalim; the family philanthropic fund of Copaxone inventor Professor Ruth Arnon and her husband, Dr Uriel Arnon; former Teva CEO Israel Makov; French fund Pharmadom; the Rashi Foundation; Gandyr Investments; Vital Capital Investments LP; a Canadian investment fund; Beyond Family Office; Check Point Software Technologies (Nasdaq: CHKP) cofounder Marius Nacht’s AMoon investment fund; Boaz Raam; and Alon Piltz. | US$5 388 396 | 19.4 million Shekels |
| Auckland | Social care and employment organisation, pharmaceutical company, investment fund, private philanthropic fund | Advanced Personal Management (APM) Workcare. | US$1 134 402 | N$1.5 million. |
NCD, non-communicable disease; SIB, social impact bond.
The financial terms of the SIBs for NCDs
| SIB | IRR if targets are not met | IRR if targets are met | IRR if targets are exceeded | Max outcome payments (from outcome payer to service provider and to investor) | Fixed coupon | Type of social impact bond structure |
| Canada’s Community Hypertension Prevention Initiative | Undisclosed. | 6.7% | 8.8% | $C4 million. | $C1 million payment guarantee. | Direct. |
| Fresno’s Asthma Impact Model (AIM4Fresno) | Undisclosed. | 5.9% return by 18 months and 8.2% by 2015. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. |
| Newcastle’s Ways to Wellness | Undisclosed, | The investor, Bridges Ventures will receive 1.38 times the initial investment. | Undisclosed. | £8.2m. | No. | Intermediated. |
| Haringey, Staffordshire and Tower Hamlets’ Mental Health Employment Partnership | Undisclosed. | 8%. | Undisclosed. | £ 2.9 million. | No. | Intermediated. |
| New South Wales’ (NSW) Resolve | 6.70%, 5.7%, 4.2%, or 0.3% for a 22.5%, 20%, 17.5% or 15% NWAU reduction respectively. | 7.5% per annum. | Depends. | $A23.9 million. | 2% per annum fixed coupon over the first 4.75 years of the bond. | Direct. |
| Hachioji’s Colorectal Cancer Screening | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | ¥9 762 000.( | No. | Direct. |
| Kobe’s Preventing severe diabetic nephropathy | Undisclosed. | 5%. | Undisclosed. | ¥34.06 million. | No. | Direct. |
| Netherlands’ Cancer and Work | Undisclosed. | 10% interest per year. | Undisclosed. | €0.77 million. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. |
| Devon | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | £774 068 (£657 068 to the National Lottery Community Fund. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. |
| Israel | Undisclosed. | 6.5%. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Direct. |
| Auckland | Undisclosed. | 9% maximum return for Class A (lower risk), 17% for class B (higher risk). | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. |
IRR, internal rate of return; NCD, non-communicable disease; ROI, return on investment; SIB, social impact bond.
The performance of the SIBs for NCDs
| Social impact bond | Evaluator | Type of evaluation or measurement | Target outcomes | Performance | Meeting/met targets? | Completed or ongoing? |
| Canada’s Community Hypertension Prevention Initiative | Social Research and Demonstration | Undisclosed. | Blood pressure stabilisation Intake volume of 7000 participants over the duration of the project. | In phase 1: Average 5 mm Hg reduction in systolic blood pressure. 90% of 500 participants who completed the programme in phase 1. | Some | Ongoing. |
| Fresno’s Asthma Impact Model (AIM4Fresno) | Ian Duncan at The University of California, Santa Barbara. | Randomised control trial using Medicaid (Medi-Cal) insurance claims data. | ≥30% reduction in asthma-related emergency department (ED) visits ≥50% in hospitalisations. | 81% reduction in asthma-related ED visits asthma-related hospitalisations decreased by 70%. | Yes | Completed. |
| Newcastle’s Ways to Wellness | The Institute of Health and Society at Newcastle University. | Qualitative study using semistructured interviews. | Improved Well-being Star40 by 1.4 points (self-management of long-term health conditions leading to greater well-being, reduced social isolation and less GP visits) Reduction in for secondary care acute costs by 22% compared with a comparison group. | Average improvement of 3.4 points on the Well-being Star Estimated 45% lower average annual hospital cost for patients compared with the comparison group. | Yes | Ongoing. |
| Haringey, Staffordshire and Tower Hamlets’ Mental Health Employment Partnership | Commissioning Better Outcomes Fund Evaluation, by Ecorys and Answer The Question (ATQ) Consultants. | Validated administrative data. | Successful engagement of 450 users (Staffordshire) job entry outcomes (<16 hours/week and >16 hours/week) for 140 (Staffordshire) Job sustainment outcomes (<16 hours/week and>16 hours/week) for 90 (Staffordshire). | In 2016/2017 (year 1): 599 individuals were engaged 190 with severe mental illness had paid jobs 91 had a sustained job for more than 6 weeks. Not stated. 172 had paid jobs. Over 84 had a sustained job for more than 6 weeks, and over 40 had a sustained job for more than 6 months. | Yes for | Completed. |
| New South Wales’ (NSW) Resolve | Urbis. | Quasi-experimental using propensity score | 1. 25% cumulative reduction in health service (National Activity Weighted Units/NWAU) compared with control group. | In 2018 (1st year): | No. | Ongoing. |
| Hachioji’s Colorectal Cancer Screening | Tokyo Institute of Technology, Cancer Scan and University of Tokyo. | Validated administrative data. | Increased rate of colorectal cancer screening in residents by 19%. Increased rate of precision examination in residents by 87% Increased number of early cancer detection by 11. | Cancer screening rate was 26.8%. Precision examination increased by 82.1% Under investigation. | Some. | Ongoing. |
| Kobe’s Preventing severe diabetic nephropathy | Institute for Future Engineering. | Questionnaire and quasi-experimental methods via propensity score matching. | 80% rate of programme completion 75% rate of lifestyle improvement, 80% reduction of kidney function deterioration. | 100% rate of programme completion 95% rate of lifestyle improvement Under investigation. | Some. | Ongoing. |
| Netherlands’ Cancer and Work | Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) and Tilburg University. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Ongoing. |
| Devon | University of the West of England. | Validated administrative data. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Ongoing. | |
| Israel | Social Finance Israel will ‘perform in-depth data analytics’. | Undisclosed. | The no of type 2 diabetes cases averted relative to control group as determined by periodic blood glucose tests. The no of healthy states produced relative to control group | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Ongoing. |
| Auckland | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | 43% of people that enter employment, and the extent to which employment is sustained, compared with a success rate of 30% in other contracts the government operates. | Undisclosed. | Undisclosed. | Ongoing. |
GP, general practitioner; NCD, non-communicable disease; SIB, social impact bond.