Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Louart S., Bonnet Emmanuel, Ridde Valéry. (2021). Is patient navigation a solution to the problem of "leaving no one behind" ? : a scoping review of evidence from low-income countries. Health Policy and Planning, 36 (1), 101-116. ISSN 0268-1080.

Titre du document
Is patient navigation a solution to the problem of "leaving no one behind" ? : a scoping review of evidence from low-income countries
Année de publication
2021
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000637269800008
Auteurs
Louart S., Bonnet Emmanuel, Ridde Valéry
Source
Health Policy and Planning, 2021, 36 (1), 101-116 ISSN 0268-1080
Patient navigation interventions, which are designed to enable patients excluded from health systems to overcome the barriers they face in accessing care, have multiplied in high-income countries since the 1990s. However, in low-income countries (LICs), indigents are generally excluded from health policies despite the international paradigm of universal health coverage (UHC). Fee exemption interventions have demonstrated their limits and it is now necessary to act on other dimensions of access to healthcare. However, there is a lack of knowledge about the interventions implemented in LICs to support the indigents throughout their care pathway. The aim of this paper is to synthesize what is known about patient navigation interventions to facilitate access to modern health systems for vulnerable populations in LICs. We therefore conducted a scoping review to identify all patient navigation interventions in LICs. We found 60 articles employing a total of 48 interventions. Most of these interventions targeted traditional beneficiaries such as people living with HIV, pregnant women and children. We utilized the framework developed by Levesque et al. (Patient-centred access to health care: conceptualising access at the interface of health systems and populations. Int J Equity Health 2013;12:18) to analyse the interventions. All acted on the ability to perceive, 34 interventions on the ability to reach, 30 on the ability to engage, 8 on the ability to pay and 6 on the ability to seek. Evaluations of these interventions were encouraging, as they often appeared to lead to improved health indicators and service utilization rates and reduced attrition in care. However, no intervention specifically targeted indigents and very few evaluations differentiated the impact of the intervention on the poorest populations. It is therefore necessary to test navigation interventions to enable those who are worst off to overcome the barriers they face. It is a major ethical issue that health policies leave no one behind and that UHC does not benefit everyone except the poorest
Plan de classement
Prospections à objectifs multiples [050PROMUL] ; Politiques de la santé [056POLSAN]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010080787]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010080787
Contact