Journal Design Emerald Editorial
African Food Systems Research (Interdisciplinary - incl Agri/Env) | 05 April 2022

Evaluating the Impact of Urban Primary Care Networks on Clinical Outcomes in Senegal

A Quasi-Experimental Study
F, a, t, o, u, S, a, r, r, ,, A, m, i, n, a, t, a, D, i, o, p, ,, M, a, m, a, d, o, u, N, d, i, a, y, e
primary healthcarequasi-experimentnon-communicable diseaseshealth policy
Networked primary care linked to significant improvement in hypertension control.
Quasi-experimental design provides robust causal evidence for policy.
Findings reveal condition-specific effectiveness, with no impact on diabetes outcomes.
Supports scale-up of integrated models for cardiovascular health management.

Abstract

{ "background": "Strengthening primary healthcare is a critical policy goal in many African nations, yet robust evidence on the effectiveness of integrated urban primary care networks in improving clinical outcomes remains limited.", "purpose and objectives": "This study aimed to quantify the causal impact of Senegal's urban primary care network (Réseau de Soins Primaires Urbains) initiative on key clinical outcomes for non-communicable diseases, specifically hypertension and type 2 diabetes.", "methodology": "A quasi-experimental difference-in-differences design was employed, analysing longitudinal patient-level data from intervention and matched control facilities. The primary model estimated the intervention effect as $Y{it} = \\beta0 + \\beta1 (\\text{Treat}i \\times \\text{Post}t) + \\gamma X{it} + \\alphai + \\deltat + \\epsilon{it}$, where $Y{it}$ is the clinical outcome for patient $i$ at time $t$. Inference was based on cluster-robust standard errors at the facility level.", "findings": "The intervention was associated with a statistically significant improvement in systolic blood pressure control. Patients in network facilities experienced a 12.4 percentage point increase (95% CI: 7.1 to 17.7) in the probability of achieving controlled blood pressure (<140/90 mmHg) compared to controls. No significant effect was observed for glycaemic control in diabetic patients.", "conclusion": "Urban primary care networks can enhance the management of hypertension, but their design may require adaptation to effectively address complex conditions like diabetes.", "recommendations": "Policy should support the scale-up of networked primary care models for cardiovascular health, complemented by targeted, condition-specific enhancements for integrated chronic disease management.", "key words": "primary health care, health systems, quasi-experiment, non-communicable diseases, health policy, urban health", "contribution statement": "This study provides the first quasi-experimental evidence on the clinical effectiveness