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Economic interventions to improve population health: a scoping study of systematic reviews

Recognizing the close relationship between poverty and health, national program managers, policy-makers and donors are increasingly including economic interventions as part of their core strategies to improve population health. However, there is often confusion among stakeholders about the definitio...

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Published in:BMC public health 2016-07, Vol.16 (1), p.528-528, Article 528
Main Authors: Khan, Mishal S, Guan, Bernie Y, Audimulam, Jananie, Cervero Liceras, Francisco, Coker, Richard J, Yoong, Joanne
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description Recognizing the close relationship between poverty and health, national program managers, policy-makers and donors are increasingly including economic interventions as part of their core strategies to improve population health. However, there is often confusion among stakeholders about the definitions and operational differences between distinct types of economic interventions and financial instruments, which can lead to important differences in interpretation and expectations. We conducted a scoping study to define and clarify concepts underlying key economic interventions - price interventions (taxes and subsidies), income transfer programs, incentive programs, livelihood support programs and health-related financial services - and map the evidence currently available from systematic reviews. We identified 195 systematic reviews on economic interventions published between 2005 and July 2015. Overall, there was an increase in the number of reviews published after 2010. The majority of reviews focused on price interventions, income transfer programs and incentive programs, with much less evidence available from systematic reviews on livelihood support programs and health-related financial services. We also identified a lack of evidence on: health outcomes in low income countries; unintended or perverse outcomes; implementation challenges; scalability and cost-effectiveness of economic interventions. We conclude that while more research is clearly needed to assess suitability and effectiveness of economic interventions in different contexts, before interventions are tested and further systematic reviews conducted, a consistent and accurate understanding of the fundamental differences in terminology and approaches is essential among researchers, public health policy makers and program planners.
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source Publicly Available Content Database; PAIS Index; PubMed Central
subjects Behavior change
Bibliographic data bases
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Economic interventions
Economics
Finance
Financial services
Health aspects
Health Behavior
Health care policy
Health policy
Health services
Households
Humans
Incentives
Income
India
Intervention
Literature reviews
Livelihood
Low income areas
Low income groups
Medical research
Motivation
Nutrition
Obesity - prevention & control
Planning
Policy making
Population studies
Poverty
Prices
Public health
Public Policy
Review
Reviews
Subsidies
Systematic review
Taxation
Taxes
Terminology
Tobacco
Underserved populations
Welfare
title Economic interventions to improve population health: a scoping study of systematic reviews
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