Evaluating the effect of integrated microfinance and health interventions: an updated review of the evidence.

Health Policy Plan

Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, RTI International, NC, USA.

Published: June 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Integrated microfinance and health programs aim to improve income security and health for poor populations, but existing solutions within specific sectors have proven insufficient on their own.
  • - A systematic review of 964 articles from various databases narrowed down to 35 studies, revealing that while microfinance paired with health education positively affected health knowledge and behaviors, its impact on actual health status remained unclear.
  • - Results showed variability, with most interventions yielding moderate quality evidence; longer and more rigorous studies are needed to determine the effectiveness of combining microfinance with various health services.

Article Abstract

Background: Solutions delivered within firm sectoral boundaries are inadequate in achieving income security and better health for poor populations. Integrated microfinance and health interventions leverage networks of women to promote financial inclusion, build livelihoods, and safeguard against high cost illnesses. Our understanding of the effect of integrated interventions has been limited by variability in intervention, outcome, design, and methodological rigour. This systematic review synthesises the literature through 2015 to understand the effect of integrated microfinance and health programs.

Methods: We searched PubMed, Scopus, Embase, EconLit, and Global Health databases and sourced bibliographies, identifying 964 articles exclusive of duplicates. Title, abstract, and full text review yielded 35 articles. Articles evaluated the effect of intentionally integrated microfinance and health programs on client outcomes. We rated the quality of evidence for each article.

Results: Most interventions combined microfinance with health education, which demonstrated positive effects on health knowledge and behaviours, though not health status. Among programs that integrated microfinance with other health components ( i.e. health micro-insurance, linkages to health providers, and access to health products), results were generally positive but mixed due to the smaller number and quality of studies. Interventions combining multiple health components in a given study demonstrated positive effects, though it was unclear which component was driving the effect. Most articles (57%) were moderate in quality.

Discussion: Integrated microfinance and health education programs were effective, though longer intervention periods are necessary to measure more complex pathways to health status. The effect of microfinance combined with other health components was less clear. Stronger randomized research designs with multiple study arms are required to improve evidence and disentangle the effects of multiple component microfinance and health interventions. Few studies attempted to understand changes in economic outcomes, limiting our understanding of the relationship between health and income effects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czw170DOI Listing

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