| Literature DB >> 34078460 |
Marina Siqueira1, Maíra Coube2, Christopher Millett3, Rudi Rocha2, Thomas Hone3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health systems are often fragmented in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This can increase inefficiencies and restrict progress towards universal health coverage. The objective of the systematic review described in this protocol will be to evaluate and synthesize the evidence concerning the impacts of health systems financing fragmentation in LMICs.Entities:
Keywords: Financing; Fragmentation; Health systems; LMICs; Outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34078460 PMCID: PMC8170990 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-021-01714-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Dimensions of health systems financing fragmentation
| Dimension | Description |
|---|---|
| Organizations | Different organizations offering health financing coverage or insurance to a significant portion of the population |
| Risk pooling | Different mechanisms that pool or share health financing across population sub-groups and/or across financing organizations |
| Eligibility | Different eligibility categories for beneficiaries |
| Benefits | Different benefits packages offered by these organizations |
| Premiums | Different contributions or premium levels offered by these organizations |
| Payments | Different payers and payment mechanisms for major provider types |
Source: Based on Bossert et al. [1]
Inclusion and exclusion criteria according to PICOS guidelines
| Population | Inclusion: Studies conducted in LMICs. The list of eligible countries is provided in Additional file Exclusion: Studies conducted in high-income countries. |
| Intervention | Inclusion: Relevant measures of health financing fragmentation (e.g., risk pools, benefits packages, premiums, payment mechanisms to providers, and funding organizations in the health system). Exclusion: Measures not related to health systems fragmentation or concerning fragmentation in healthcare provision (e.g., fragmentation of care index, a metric of dispersion of medical visits across different providers). |
| Comparison | Inclusion: Any relevant measure of financing fragmentation in alternative settings (i.e., intervention and control groups) or at alternative time points (e.g., before and after an intervention implementation). Exclusion: Studies with no comparator and a single data point |
| Outcomes | Inclusion: The primary outcomes will be health system-related goals such as health outcomes (e.g., mortality, morbidity, patient-reported outcome measures) and indicators of access, services utilization, equity, and financial risk protection. Additional outcomes will include intermediate health system objectives (e.g., indicators of efficiency and quality). Exclusion: Outcomes not related to health systems’ goals. |
| Study | Inclusion: Eligible designs are experimental (e.g., randomized controlled trials), quasi-experimental (e.g., interrupted time series, pretest-posttest, regression discontinuity, difference-in-difference, and propensity score matching analyses), or observational studies (e.g., cross-sectional studies, case-control, cohort studies). Included studies will be restricted to articles and working papers published in English, Portuguese, or Spanish and with free access to the full text. There are no date restrictions. Exclusion: Non-empirical, qualitative, or descriptive studies (e.g., editorials, experts’ opinions, meeting reports, news items, case series, case reports, case studies, interview-based studies). |