Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature

<p><strong>Background:</strong><br /> Decentralization of health systems has made sub-national/regional healthcare systems the backbone of healthcare delivery. These regions are tasked with the difficult responsibility of determining healthcare priorities and resource allocat...

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Principais autores: Waithaka, D, Tsofa, B, Barasa, E
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: F1000Research 2018
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author Waithaka, D
Tsofa, B
Barasa, E
author_facet Waithaka, D
Tsofa, B
Barasa, E
author_sort Waithaka, D
collection OXFORD
description <p><strong>Background:</strong><br /> Decentralization of health systems has made sub-national/regional healthcare systems the backbone of healthcare delivery. These regions are tasked with the difficult responsibility of determining healthcare priorities and resource allocation amidst scarce resources. We aimed to review empirical literature that evaluated priority setting practice at the meso (sub-national) level of health systems.</p><br /> <p><strong>Methods:</strong><br /> We systematically searched PubMed, ScienceDirect and Google scholar databases and supplemented these with manual searching for relevant studies, based on the reference list of selected papers. We only included empirical studies that described and evaluated, or those that only evaluated priority setting practice at the meso-level. A total of 16 papers were identified from LMICs and HICs. We analyzed data from the selected papers by thematic review.</p><br /> <p><strong>Results:</strong><br /> Few studies used systematic priority setting processes, and all but one were from HICs. Both formal and informal criteria are used in priority-setting, however, informal criteria appear to be more perverse in LMICs compared to HICs. The priority setting process at the meso-level is a top-down approach with minimal involvement of the community. Accountability for reasonableness was the most common evaluative framework as it was used in 12 of the 16 studies. Efficiency, reallocation of resources and options for service delivery redesign were the most common outcome measures used to evaluate priority setting.</p><br /> <p><strong>Limitations:</strong><br /> Our study was limited by the fact that there are very few empirical studies that have evaluated priority setting at the meso-level and there is likelihood that we did not capture all the studies.</p><br /> <p><strong>Conclusions:</strong><br /> Improving priority setting practices at the meso level is crucial to strengthening health systems. This can be achieved through incorporating and adapting systematic priority setting processes and frameworks to the context where used, and making considerations of both process and outcome measures during priority setting and resource allocation.</p><br />
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spelling oxford-uuid:d32b04a9-0742-4d0c-97a5-c5f5f8e1c3aa2022-03-27T08:09:25ZEvaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literatureJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:d32b04a9-0742-4d0c-97a5-c5f5f8e1c3aaEnglishSymplectic ElementsF1000Research2018Waithaka, DTsofa, BBarasa, E<p><strong>Background:</strong><br /> Decentralization of health systems has made sub-national/regional healthcare systems the backbone of healthcare delivery. These regions are tasked with the difficult responsibility of determining healthcare priorities and resource allocation amidst scarce resources. We aimed to review empirical literature that evaluated priority setting practice at the meso (sub-national) level of health systems.</p><br /> <p><strong>Methods:</strong><br /> We systematically searched PubMed, ScienceDirect and Google scholar databases and supplemented these with manual searching for relevant studies, based on the reference list of selected papers. We only included empirical studies that described and evaluated, or those that only evaluated priority setting practice at the meso-level. A total of 16 papers were identified from LMICs and HICs. We analyzed data from the selected papers by thematic review.</p><br /> <p><strong>Results:</strong><br /> Few studies used systematic priority setting processes, and all but one were from HICs. Both formal and informal criteria are used in priority-setting, however, informal criteria appear to be more perverse in LMICs compared to HICs. The priority setting process at the meso-level is a top-down approach with minimal involvement of the community. Accountability for reasonableness was the most common evaluative framework as it was used in 12 of the 16 studies. Efficiency, reallocation of resources and options for service delivery redesign were the most common outcome measures used to evaluate priority setting.</p><br /> <p><strong>Limitations:</strong><br /> Our study was limited by the fact that there are very few empirical studies that have evaluated priority setting at the meso-level and there is likelihood that we did not capture all the studies.</p><br /> <p><strong>Conclusions:</strong><br /> Improving priority setting practices at the meso level is crucial to strengthening health systems. This can be achieved through incorporating and adapting systematic priority setting processes and frameworks to the context where used, and making considerations of both process and outcome measures during priority setting and resource allocation.</p><br />
spellingShingle Waithaka, D
Tsofa, B
Barasa, E
Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature
title Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature
title_full Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature
title_fullStr Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature
title_short Evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level: A thematic review of empirical literature
title_sort evaluating healthcare priority setting at the meso level a thematic review of empirical literature
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