The influence of corruption and governance in the delivery of frontline health care services in the public sector: A scoping review of current and future prospects in low and middle-income countries of south and south-east Asia
Date
2020-06-08Publisher
BMCAuthor
Naher, NahitunHoque, Roksana
Hassan, Muhammad Shaikh
Balabanova, Dina
Adams, Alayne M.
Ahmed, Syed Masud
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Naher, N., Hoque, R., Hassan, M. S., Balabanova, D., Adams, A. M., & Ahmed, S. M. (2020). The influence of corruption and governance in the delivery of frontline health care services in the public sector: A scoping review of current and future prospects in low and middle-income countries of south and south-east Asia. BMC Public Health, 20(1) doi:10.1186/s12889-020-08975-0Abstract
Background: The dynamic intersection of a pluralistic health system, large informal sector, and poor regulatory
environment have provided conditions favourable for ‘corruption’ in the LMICs of south and south-east Asia region.
‘Corruption’ works to undermine the UHC goals of achieving equity, quality, and responsiveness including financial
protection, especially while delivering frontline health care services. This scoping review examines current situation
regarding health sector corruption at frontlines of service delivery in this region, related policy perspectives, and
alternative strategies currently being tested to address this pervasive phenomenon.
Methods: A scoping review following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis
(PRISMA) was conducted, using three search engines i.e., PubMed, SCOPUS and Google Scholar. A total of 15 articles
and documents on corruption and 18 on governance were selected for analysis. A PRISMA extension for Scoping
Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) checklist was filled-in to complete this report. Data were extracted using a pre-designed
template and analysed by ‘mixed studies review’ method.
Results: Common types of corruption like informal payments, bribery and absenteeism identified in the review
have largely financial factors as the underlying cause. Poor salary and benefits, poor incentives and motivation, and
poor governance have a damaging impact on health outcomes and the quality of health care services. These result
in high out-of-pocket expenditure, erosion of trust in the system, and reduced service utilization. Implementing
regulations remain constrained not only due to lack of institutional capacity but also political commitment. Lack of
good governance encourage frontline health care providers to bend the rules of law and make centrally designed anti-corruption measures largely in-effective. Alternatively, a few bottom-up community-engaged interventions have
been tested showing promising results. The challenge is to scale up the successful ones for measurable impact.
Conclusions: Corruption and lack of good governance in these countries undermine the delivery of quality
essential health care services in an equitable manner, make it costly for the poor and disadvantaged, and results in
poor health outcomes. Traditional measures to combat corruption have largely been ineffective, necessitating the
need for innovative thinking if UHC is to be achieved by 2030.