Rethinking Public Private Mix (PPM) Performance in the Tuberculosis Program: How Is Care Seeking Impacting This Model in High TB Burden Countries?
Abstract
:1. Background
2. PPM Expansion Unmatched with Private-Sector Incident TB Notification
3. Measurement of PPM Program Performance Is Unclear
4. Tuberculosis Risk Profiles among Health Seekers as the Yardstick for PPM Program Evaluation
5. Insights and Implications
- We found heterogeneity in how tuberculosis public–private mix (PPM) was defined, and a lack of harmonized data collection tools and performance standards, which renders cross-country performance assessment challenging.
- The private-to-public sector mobility of TB patients and sectoral differences in socioeconomic risk profile highlights the inadequacies of using tuberculosis health-seeking behaviors to set the targets and measure performance of PPM programs.
- Global consensus on what constitutes PPM TB care providers, harmonization of reporting tools, and re-evaluation of how PPM program performance is evaluated and compared across countries.
- Policies that integrate universal health insurance into tuberculosis PPM expansion framework to limit catastrophic TB costs and other socioeconomic indices that are most likely higher among private-sector health seekers.
6. Conclusions and Policy Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Adepoju, V.A.; Oladimeji, O.; Horsburgh, C.R. Rethinking Public Private Mix (PPM) Performance in the Tuberculosis Program: How Is Care Seeking Impacting This Model in High TB Burden Countries? Healthcare 2022, 10, 1285. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071285
Adepoju VA, Oladimeji O, Horsburgh CR. Rethinking Public Private Mix (PPM) Performance in the Tuberculosis Program: How Is Care Seeking Impacting This Model in High TB Burden Countries? Healthcare. 2022; 10(7):1285. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071285
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdepoju, Victor Abiola, Olanrewaju Oladimeji, and C. Robert Horsburgh. 2022. "Rethinking Public Private Mix (PPM) Performance in the Tuberculosis Program: How Is Care Seeking Impacting This Model in High TB Burden Countries?" Healthcare 10, no. 7: 1285. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071285
APA StyleAdepoju, V. A., Oladimeji, O., & Horsburgh, C. R. (2022). Rethinking Public Private Mix (PPM) Performance in the Tuberculosis Program: How Is Care Seeking Impacting This Model in High TB Burden Countries? Healthcare, 10(7), 1285. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071285