Journal Design Clinical Emerald
African Food Systems Research (Interdisciplinary - incl Agri/Env) | 24 December 2004

Methodological Evaluation and Efficiency Gains in Senegal's Community Health Centres

A Difference-in-Differences Meta-Analysis
F, a, t, o, u, m, a, t, a, D, i, o, p, ,, A, m, i, n, a, t, a, S, o, w, ,, M, a, m, a, d, o, u, N, d, i, a, y, e
Health Systems EvaluationDifference-in-DifferencesOperational EfficiencySenegal
Synthesis reveals positive but heterogeneous efficiency gains from interventions.
Key finding: δ = 1.8 increase in consultations per staff hour (95% CI: 0.7 to 2.9).
Critical parallel trends assumption often inadequately tested in existing literature.
DiD models provide robust evidence when applied with methodological rigor.

Abstract

{ "background": "Community health centres are a cornerstone of primary care delivery in many African nations, yet rigorous, quantitative evaluations of their operational efficiency and the impact of systemic reforms remain limited. This creates a significant evidence gap for health systems planning and resource allocation.", "purpose and objectives": "This meta-analysis aims to synthesise existing quantitative studies that employ the difference-in-differences (DiD) econometric model to evaluate efficiency gains within Senegal's community health centre system, with a specific focus on methodological rigour and the consistency of estimated effects.", "methodology": "We conducted a systematic search for peer-reviewed and grey literature reporting DiD estimates of interventions targeting operational efficiency. Studies were assessed for methodological quality, including parallel trends assumption testing and control for confounding. The core synthesised model is $Y{it} = \\beta0 + \\beta1 \\text{Treat}i + \\beta2 \\text{Post}t + \\delta (\\text{Treat}i \\cdot \\text{Post}t) + \\epsilon_{it}$, where $\\delta$ is the average treatment effect. Pooled estimates were derived using inverse-variance weighting, with heterogeneity assessed via the $I^2$ statistic.", "findings": "The synthesis of seven qualifying studies indicates a positive, though heterogeneous, average effect of targeted interventions on efficiency metrics. A key concrete result is that pooled estimates suggest a significant increase in patient consultations per clinical staff hour (δ = 1.8, 95% CI: 0.7 to 2.9). Methodological appraisal revealed that only a minority of studies adequately tested the critical parallel trends assumption.", "conclusion": "The DiD approach, when applied with methodological rigour, provides robust evidence of measurable efficiency improvements following specific interventions in community health centres. However, inconsistent application of key model assumptions across the literature may affect the validity and comparability of some reported gains.", "recommendations": "Future evaluations must prioritise and explicitly report tests of the parallel