Abstract

BackgroundAlthough values underpin the goals pursued in health systems, including how health systems benefit the population, it is often not clear how values are incorporated into policy decision-making about health systems. The challenge is to encompass social/citizen values, health system goals, and financial realities and to incorporate them into the policy-making process. This is a challenge for all health systems and of particular importance for Latin American (LA) countries. Our objective was to understand how and under what conditions societal values inform decisions about health system financing in LA countries.MethodsA critical interpretive synthesis approach was utilised for this work. We searched 17 databases in December 2016 to identify articles written in English, Spanish or Portuguese that focus on values that inform the policy process for health system financing in LA countries at the macro and meso levels. Two reviewers independently screened records and assessed them for inclusion. One researcher conceptually mapped the included articles, created structured summaries of key findings from each, and selected a purposive sample of articles to thematically synthesise the results across the domains of agenda-setting/prioritisation, policy development and implementation.ResultsWe identified 5925 references, included 199 papers, and synthesised 68 papers. We identified 116 values and developed a framework to explain how values have been used to inform policy decisions about financing in LA countries. This framework has four categories – (1) goal-related values (i.e. guiding principles of the health system); (2) technical values (those incorporated into the instruments adopted by policy-makers to ensure a sustainable and efficient health system); (3) governance values (those applied in the policy process to ensure a transparent and accountable process of decision-making); and (4) situational values (a broad category of values that represent competing strategies to make decisions in the health systems, their influence varying according to the four factors).ConclusionsIt is an effort to consolidate and explain how different social values are considered and how they support policy decision-making about health system financing. This can help policy-makers to explicitly incorporate values into the policy process and understand how values are supporting the achievement of policy goals in health system financing.Trial registrationThe protocol was registered with PROSPERO, ID=CRD42017057049.

Highlights

  • Values underpin the goals pursued in health systems, including how health systems benefit the population, it is often not clear how values are incorporated into policy decision-making about health systems

  • It is an effort to consolidate and explain how different social values are considered and how they support policy decision-making about health system financing

  • Health system); (3) governance values; and (4) situational values

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Summary

Introduction

Values underpin the goals pursued in health systems, including how health systems benefit the population, it is often not clear how values are incorporated into policy decision-making about health systems. The challenge is to encompass social/citizen values, health system goals, and financial realities and to incorporate them into the policy-making process This is a challenge for all health systems and of particular importance for Latin American (LA) countries. Values underpin the goals pursued in health systems and often the means for achieving them, including how health systems and particular health policies benefit the population, it is often not clear how values are incorporated into policy decision-making about health systems This is perhaps not surprising given the complexity of decision-making about health systems, the wide range of values prioritised (and advocated for) by different stakeholders, and the many ways in which values can drive policy decisions as well as the reality that policy-makers often do not want to be explicit about the values used in the policy decision-making process [6]. Clarity may be all the more necessary in the resource-constrained health systems of low- and middleincome countries, where the values guiding how to get cost-effective treatments to those who need them and to achieve a better health status of their populations can have particular direct impacts [1]

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