Governance arrangements for health systems in low-income countries: an overview of systematic reviews

Article type
Authors
Herrera C1, Ciapponi A2, Rada G3, Oxman AD4, Ciapponi A4, Bastías G5, Garcia Marti S2, Okwundu CI6, Opiyo N7, Pantoja T8, Paulsen E4, Wiysonge CS9, Peñaloza B8
11Department of Public Health, Evidence Based Health Care Program, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
2Instituto de Efectividad Clínica y Sanitaria - IECS, Argentina
3Department of Internal Medicine, Evidence Based Health Care Program, Faculty of Medicine, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
4Global Health Unit, Norwegian Knowledge Centre for the Health Services, Oslo, Norway
5Department of Public Health, School of Medicine, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago , Chile
6Centre for Evidence-based Health Care, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Tygerberg, South Africa
7Child and Newborn Health Group, Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Nairobi, Kenya
8Department of Family Medicine, Evidence Based Health Care Program, Faculty of Medicine, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
9e for Evidence-based Health Care, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Tygerberg, South Africa
Abstract
Background:
This is one of four overviews of systematic reviews (SRs) of strategies for improving health systems in low-income countries (LIC), including delivery, financial and governance arrangements and implementation strategies.

Objectives:
- Provide a broad overview of what is known about the effects of governance arrangements (Table 1) for health systems in LIC based on the findings of up-to-date SRs.
- Identify needs and priorities for SRs and evaluations of alternative governance arrangements.

Methods:
We included SRs that:
- had a methods section, explicit selection criteria and not important limitations affecting the reliability of its findings;
- assessed the effects of governance arrangements;
- reported any of the following types of outcomes: patient outcomes, quality or utilisation of healthcare services, resource use, healthcare provider outcomes, or social outcomes;
- were published within the past 10 years;
- are relevant to LIC (or lower-middle-income according to the World Bank classification);
In March 2013 we screened SRs in PDQ-Evidence (www.pdq-evidence.org), a database of SR about health systems. Two authors independently screened titles/abstracts to identify eligible SRs (AO & SL screened the titles and abstracts that could not be confidently included/excluded after the first screening). One author screened the focused searches described above. An author applied the selection criteria to the full text of potentially eligible SRs and assessed the reliability of SRs (using SUPPORT and SURE collaboration tools) that met all of the other selection criteria (judgments were checked independently by AO or SL). The certainty of the evidence was assessed using the GRADE approach. We summarised SRs using an approach developed by the SUPPORT Collaboration (www.supportsummaries.org) that includes the preparation of 'Summary of findings' tables for the main comparisons in each SR. SUPPORT Summaries are peer-reviewed and published on SUPPORT open access website.

Results:
We included 18 SRs, extracted and summarized key messages from those reviews, identified needs for new/updated SRs and identified needs for new studies.