Approaches, enablers and barriers to govern the private sector in health in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review.

Catherine Goodman ORCID logo ; Sophie Witter ORCID logo ; Mark Hellowell ORCID logo ; Louise Allen ; Shuchi Srinivasan ; Swapna Nixon ; Ayesha Burney ; Debrupa Bhattacharjee ; Anna Cocozza ORCID logo ; Gabrielle Appleford ; +2 more... Aya Thabet ; David Clarke ORCID logo ; (2024) Approaches, enablers and barriers to govern the private sector in health in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review. BMJ global health, 8 (S5). e015771. ISSN 2059-7908 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2024-015771
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Introduction The private sector plays a substantial role in delivering and financing healthcare in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Supporting governments to govern the private sector effectively, and so improve outcomes across the health system, requires an understanding of the evidence base on private health sector governance. This paper reports on a scoping review, which synthesised evidence on the approaches used to govern private sector delivery and financing of healthcare in LMICs, the effectiveness of these approaches and the key enablers and barriers to strengthening governance. Methods We undertook a systematic search of databases of published articles and grey literature to identify eligible papers published since 2010, drawing on WHO's governance definition. Data were extracted into a pretested matrix and analysed using narrative synthesis, structured by WHO's six governance behaviours and an additional cross-cutting theme on capacities. Results 107 studies were selected as relevant, covering 101 LMICs. Qualitative methods and document/literature review were predominant. The findings demonstrate the relevance of the WHO governance behaviours, but the lack of robust evidence for approaches to implementing them. Valuable insights from the literature include the need for a clear vision around governance aims; the importance of ensuring that policy dialogue processes are inclusive and transparent, avoiding interest group capture; the benefits of exploiting synergies between governance mechanisms; and the need to develop capacity to enact governance among both public and private actors. Conclusion Governance choices shape not just the current health system, but also its future development. Common barriers to effective governance must be addressed in policy design, stakeholder engagement, public and private sector accountability, monitoring and capacity. Achieving this will require in-depth explorations of governance mechanisms and more rigorous documentation of implementation and outcomes in diverse contexts.


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