The impacts of decentralization on health system equity, efficiency and resilience: a realist synthesis of the evidence
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Health Policy and Planning
Abstract
One constant refrain in evaluations and reviews of decentralization is that the results are mixed. But
given that decentralization is a complex intervention or phenomenon, what is more important is to
generate evidence to inform implementation strategies. We therefore synthesized evidence from the
literature to understand why, how and under what circumstances decentralization influences health
system equity, efficiency and resilience. In doing this, we adopted the realist approach to evidence
synthesis and included quantitative and qualitative studies in high-, low- and middle-income countries
that assessed the the impact of decentralization on health systems. We searched the Medline and
Embase databases via Ovid, and the Cochrane library of systematic reviews and included 51 studies
with data from 25 countries. We identified three mechanisms through which decentralization impacts
on health system equity, efficiency and resilience: ‘Voting with feet’ (reflecting how decentralization either
exacerbates or assuages the existing patterns of inequities in the distribution of people, resources
and outcomes in a jurisdiction); ‘Close to ground’ (reflecting how bringing governance closer to the
people allows for use of local initiative, information, feedback, input and control); and ‘Watching the
watchers’ (reflecting mutual accountability and support relations between multiple centres of governance
which are multiplied by decentralization, involving governments at different levels and also community
health committees and health boards). We also identified institutional, socio-economic and
geographic contextual factors that influence each of these mechanisms. By moving beyond findings
that the effects of decentralization on health systems and outcomes are mixed, this review presents
mechanisms and contextual factors to which policymakers and implementers need to pay attention in
their efforts to maximize the positive and minimize the negative impact of decentralized governance.
Description
Research Article