TY - CHAP
T1 - Paying for Performance for Health Care in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: An Economic Perspective
AU - Chalkley, Martin John
AU - Mirelman, Andrew
AU - Siciliani, Luigi
AU - Suhrcke, Marc
PY - 2020/6
Y1 - 2020/6
N2 - Pay-for-performance (P4P) arrangements, which are fixtures of health systems in high-income countries (HIC), have been deployed across many low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings as well. P4P programmes in HICs have typically addressed the challenge of over-delivery, controlling costs while maintaining adequate services and getting the best clinical practice, or quality of care. In LMICs, health systems are similarly concerned with issues of quality, but they may also grapple with problems of low demand, lack of resources and poor governance. By revisiting the overall framework for understanding P4P arrangements and their benefits and risks in the context of health care delivery, this chapter draws on experiences with P4P in HIC to assess how the insights from economic theory apply in practice in LMICs. Issues of programme design and unintended consequences are summarized, and LMIC case examples of where these concepts apply and are missing from the evidence of P4P programmes in LMIC settings are also reviewed. The evidence on P4P in LMICs is still in its infancy, both in terms of evidence of impact (especially as far as health outcomes are concerned), and in terms of the attention to potential unintended consequences. However, it is critical to return to the basic economic understanding of how the contractual arrangements and incentives of P4P inform programme design and ultimately impact health outcomes and service delivery.
AB - Pay-for-performance (P4P) arrangements, which are fixtures of health systems in high-income countries (HIC), have been deployed across many low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings as well. P4P programmes in HICs have typically addressed the challenge of over-delivery, controlling costs while maintaining adequate services and getting the best clinical practice, or quality of care. In LMICs, health systems are similarly concerned with issues of quality, but they may also grapple with problems of low demand, lack of resources and poor governance. By revisiting the overall framework for understanding P4P arrangements and their benefits and risks in the context of health care delivery, this chapter draws on experiences with P4P in HIC to assess how the insights from economic theory apply in practice in LMICs. Issues of programme design and unintended consequences are summarized, and LMIC case examples of where these concepts apply and are missing from the evidence of P4P programmes in LMIC settings are also reviewed. The evidence on P4P in LMICs is still in its infancy, both in terms of evidence of impact (especially as far as health outcomes are concerned), and in terms of the attention to potential unintended consequences. However, it is critical to return to the basic economic understanding of how the contractual arrangements and incentives of P4P inform programme design and ultimately impact health outcomes and service delivery.
KW - Health care
KW - Low- and Middle-Income Countries
KW - Economic Perspective
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/0f86379b-c189-37f6-bdb0-bad62ba59865/
U2 - 10.1142/9789813272378_0006
DO - 10.1142/9789813272378_0006
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-981-3272-36-1
T3 - World Scientific Global Health Economics and Public Policy
SP - 157
EP - 190
BT - Global Health Economics - Shaping Healthcare Policy in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
A2 - Revill, Paul
A2 - Suhrcke, Marc
A2 - Moreno-Serra, Rodrigo
A2 - Sculpher, Mark
PB - World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte Ltd
ER -