Targeting anticorruption interventions at the front line: Developmental governance in health systems
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Date
2020-12-03Publisher
BMJ JournalsAuthor
Hutchinson, EleanorNaher, Nahitun
Roy, Pallavi
McKee, Martin
Mayhew, Susannah H
Ahmed, Syed Masud
Balabanova, Dina
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Hutchinson, E., Naher, N., Roy, P., McKee, M., Mayhew, S. H., Ahmed, S. M., & Balabanova, D. (2020). Targeting anticorruption interventions at the front line: Developmental governance in health systems. BMJ Global Health, 5(12) doi:10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003092Abstract
In 2008, Vian reported an increasing interest in
understanding how corruption affects healthcare outcomes
and asked what could be done to combat corruption in
the health sector. Eleven years later, corruption is seen as
a heterogeneous mix of activity, extensive and expensive
in terms of loss of productivity, increasing inequity and
costs, but with few examples of programmes that have
successfully tackled corruption in low-income or middleincome countries. The commitment, by multilateral
organisations and many governments to the Sustainable
Development Goals and Universal Health Coverage has
renewed an interest to find ways to tackle corruption
within health systems. These efforts must, however, begin
with a critical assessment of the existing theoretical
models and approaches that have underpinned action
in the health sector in the past and an assessment of
the potential of innovations from anticorruption work
developed in sectors other than health. To that end, this
paper maps the key debates and theoretical frameworks
that have dominated research on corruption in health. It
examines their limitations, the blind spots that they create
in terms of the questions asked, and the capacity for
research to take account of contextual factors that drive
practice. It draws on new work from heterodox economics
which seeks to target anticorruption interventions at
practices that have high impact and which are politically
and economically feasible to address. We consider how
such approaches can be adopted into health systems and
what new questions need to be addressed by researchers
to support the development of sustainable solutions to
corruption. We present a short case study from Bangladesh
to show how such an approach reveals new perspectives
on actors and drivers of corruption practice. We conclude
by considering the most important areas for research and
policy.