Impact of Rapid Expansion of the Estrategia de Saude da Familia in Rio de Janeiro: Mixed Methods Evaluation
Lead Research Organisation:
Imperial College London
Department Name: School of Public Health
Abstract
The United Nations has recently set a target for countries to provide comprehensive healthcare at low cost to all citizens. While this is a welcome development, there are concerns that strengthening Primary Health Care (PHC) is not prioritised enough within national and international plans to achieve this. These concerns are grounded in knowledge that health systems with stronger PHC tend to have greater population reach, can respond better to local health needs, and provide a comprehensive set of benefits at lower cost. One potential reason for the lack of priority given to PHC is that most previous research in this area has been conducted in North America and Europe.
Brazil has invested in PHC over the last 20 years through the Estrategia Saude da Familia (ESF). The focus of the ESF is to re-orientate the Brazilian health system to PHC through the delivery of community based health care by multidisciplinary teams. The ESF is much less developed in large cities than rural areas, with poor populations living in favelas (urban slums) being especially underserved. ESF coverage was low (7% in 2008) in Rio de Janeiro until recently, but this has increased substantially since 2011(to 50% in June 2016) reflectings political ambition to achieve universal coverage in the city. The impact of ESF expansion in Rio de Janeiro on health outcomes and costs has important implications for how health systems in large cities in Brazil and internationally should be developed.
Our project will be conducted by a multi-disciplinary team of researchers and policy makers from Brazil, UK and USA, including doctors, health planners, mathematical modellers, and social scientists. It involves quantitative analyses of a unique database that has linked information from patients' medical records (both primary care and hospitalisation records), data on eligibility for state welfare benefits, and deaths in the city. This component of the project will examine whether public investment in ESF in Rio de Janeiro has produced better health outcomes, including a lower likelihood of being admitted to hospital for chronic conditions and a lower risk of death during infancy. It will examine whether individuals dually enrolled in the ESF and a major conditional cash transfer programme derive health benefits above those obtained from each programme in isolation. The project will also explore whether certain groups of patients, including from different race/ethnic groups, benefit more from the ESF than others. We will observe practices in health clinics and undertake interviews with health managers, clinicians, and patients to understand success in the implementation process and barriers to programme expansion. We will undertake mathematical modelling to estimate the potential benefits from further expansion of the programme in the city and whether comparable benefits may accrue if the ESF is expanded in other major Brazilian cities.
Our project aims to influence the development of PHC in Rio de Janeiro, other large cities in Brazil, and internationally by generating and actively disseminating timely evidence to policy-makers especially in a period of economical crisis. We will achieve this by including policy-makers and programme implementers from Rio de Janeiro in our research team. We will jointly host dissemination events with the Pan American Health Association in Rio de Janeiro and Brasilia with policy-makers from cities across Brazil to share the findings in order to inform policy development in the country and internationally. Our evaluation will provide important information to other countries seeking to achieve UHC in major urban areas and large cities, such as Colombia and India. By fostering links between academics and policy makers from Brazil, UK, and USA with extensive experience in analysing linked datasets, microsimulation modelling and qualitative research, we will build research skills and research translation capacity among all team members.
Brazil has invested in PHC over the last 20 years through the Estrategia Saude da Familia (ESF). The focus of the ESF is to re-orientate the Brazilian health system to PHC through the delivery of community based health care by multidisciplinary teams. The ESF is much less developed in large cities than rural areas, with poor populations living in favelas (urban slums) being especially underserved. ESF coverage was low (7% in 2008) in Rio de Janeiro until recently, but this has increased substantially since 2011(to 50% in June 2016) reflectings political ambition to achieve universal coverage in the city. The impact of ESF expansion in Rio de Janeiro on health outcomes and costs has important implications for how health systems in large cities in Brazil and internationally should be developed.
Our project will be conducted by a multi-disciplinary team of researchers and policy makers from Brazil, UK and USA, including doctors, health planners, mathematical modellers, and social scientists. It involves quantitative analyses of a unique database that has linked information from patients' medical records (both primary care and hospitalisation records), data on eligibility for state welfare benefits, and deaths in the city. This component of the project will examine whether public investment in ESF in Rio de Janeiro has produced better health outcomes, including a lower likelihood of being admitted to hospital for chronic conditions and a lower risk of death during infancy. It will examine whether individuals dually enrolled in the ESF and a major conditional cash transfer programme derive health benefits above those obtained from each programme in isolation. The project will also explore whether certain groups of patients, including from different race/ethnic groups, benefit more from the ESF than others. We will observe practices in health clinics and undertake interviews with health managers, clinicians, and patients to understand success in the implementation process and barriers to programme expansion. We will undertake mathematical modelling to estimate the potential benefits from further expansion of the programme in the city and whether comparable benefits may accrue if the ESF is expanded in other major Brazilian cities.
Our project aims to influence the development of PHC in Rio de Janeiro, other large cities in Brazil, and internationally by generating and actively disseminating timely evidence to policy-makers especially in a period of economical crisis. We will achieve this by including policy-makers and programme implementers from Rio de Janeiro in our research team. We will jointly host dissemination events with the Pan American Health Association in Rio de Janeiro and Brasilia with policy-makers from cities across Brazil to share the findings in order to inform policy development in the country and internationally. Our evaluation will provide important information to other countries seeking to achieve UHC in major urban areas and large cities, such as Colombia and India. By fostering links between academics and policy makers from Brazil, UK, and USA with extensive experience in analysing linked datasets, microsimulation modelling and qualitative research, we will build research skills and research translation capacity among all team members.
Technical Summary
Primary health care strengthening has been insufficiently prioritised in Universal Health Coverage proposals. This may be partly due to lack of evidence from middle-income countries. This project will use mixed methods to evaluate the impact of recent expansion of the Estratégia de Saúde da Familia (ESF) in Rio de Janeiro (RJ). The project has three interlinked work packages:
WP1 An individual-level dataset linking PHC, hospital, mortality and welfare recipient data will be created. We will examine impacts of the ESF on a variety of outcome indicators and whether ESF benefits are similar across key patient characteristics (race/ethnicity, socio-economic status, literacy). We will explore potential synergistic health benefits from ESF and enrolment in a national conditional cash transfer programme (Bolsa Familia). Analytic approaches of the longitudinal dataset will include difference-in-difference analyses with propensity score matching, in addition to individual-level multi-level regression modelling.
WP2 Micro-simulation modelling will exploit the large amount of estimates and parameters obtained from WP1 to model the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a variety of ESF coverage scenarios in RJ, and additionally in 16 Brazilian cities with more than 1 million population (where ESF coverage is low and 45 million (22%) of the population live).
WP3: Our qualitative research component will focus on understanding patient and provider perspectives on the introduction of ESF, PHC processes (including comprehensiveness, coordination, and continuity), and health outcomes. Special attention will be given to potential barriers and facilitators to the implementation of the new care model. Data will be collected through three mutually complimentary methods: i) participant observation in family clinics, ii) semi-structured interviews with patients and health care workers iii) focus group interviews of community health workers.
WP1 An individual-level dataset linking PHC, hospital, mortality and welfare recipient data will be created. We will examine impacts of the ESF on a variety of outcome indicators and whether ESF benefits are similar across key patient characteristics (race/ethnicity, socio-economic status, literacy). We will explore potential synergistic health benefits from ESF and enrolment in a national conditional cash transfer programme (Bolsa Familia). Analytic approaches of the longitudinal dataset will include difference-in-difference analyses with propensity score matching, in addition to individual-level multi-level regression modelling.
WP2 Micro-simulation modelling will exploit the large amount of estimates and parameters obtained from WP1 to model the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a variety of ESF coverage scenarios in RJ, and additionally in 16 Brazilian cities with more than 1 million population (where ESF coverage is low and 45 million (22%) of the population live).
WP3: Our qualitative research component will focus on understanding patient and provider perspectives on the introduction of ESF, PHC processes (including comprehensiveness, coordination, and continuity), and health outcomes. Special attention will be given to potential barriers and facilitators to the implementation of the new care model. Data will be collected through three mutually complimentary methods: i) participant observation in family clinics, ii) semi-structured interviews with patients and health care workers iii) focus group interviews of community health workers.
Planned Impact
The inclusion of a target to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is welcome. However, the importance of primary healthcare (PHC) strengthening in achieving UHC is absent from the SDG document. This reflects concerns that PHC is being insufficiently prioritised within UHC proposals at both national and international levels. Our project has the potential to provide important and timely evidence - in much greater detail than currently - to influence health care planning for UHC at local, national and international levels.
In Brazil, understanding the implementation challenges and impacts of the ESF in large cities is vital - as much needed progress in achieving UHC in urban Brazil is threatened by constraints in public expenditure precipitated by economic crisis. Policy-makers in Brazil need confidence in programmes they fund and implement, including detailed understanding of the impact on populations' health and potential un-intended consequences. The political commitment to achieving UHC in Rio de Janeiro (RJ) is an exemplar for studying ESF impacts in urban Brazil and other countries where UHC progress lags in urban areas. Our study aims to contribute to the Brazilian and international PHC evidence through: i) understanding the implementation pathways to rapid PHC expansion in an urban and politically challenging environment; ii) providing in-depth estimates of the impact of the program on a wide range of health outcomes and sub-groups at greater detail than previous studies and using robust methods with casual inference (through the exploitation of individual-level PHC records); iii) supplementing quantitative analyses with qualitative understanding of ESF from patient and health professional perspectives, explaining and validating our findings; and iv) forecasting potential PHC policy scenarios in RJ and other Brazilian cities to highlight the potential impact on health from further expansion and inform policy direction.
The outcomes from this research study not only have the potential to influence global understanding of PHC programmes, but also establish a strong model for policy-maker and researcher relationships. This integrated research package will ensure policy-maker and implementers focus specific research questions to maximum relevance, whilst results can be quickly disseminated and inform implementation actions on the ground. There will be capacity building through joint management and sharing of different data sources, collaborative efforts towards a joint research goal, and improvements in the interface of the research translation pathway. By fostering links with departments with strong experience in micro-simulation and primary care hospital linked datasets, the project will expand local research capacity in Brazil and within partner institutions in the UK and US.
The project will create a novel dataset that links welfare benefit, health care, and mortality data, establishing a leading example of robust impact evaluations. This has been enabled by the investment in electronic medical records (EMRs) within the ESF expansion programme in RJ. The dataset is not only unique in Brazilian context but internationally - i.e. the UK's Clinical Practice Research Dataset has only recently linked PHC records to hospital admissions and mortality data, but has no data on welfare receipt status. The project therefore adds considerable value by creating a legacy dataset that will be available for ongoing policy evaluation and analyses. For example, the dataset will enable Brazil to participate in cross-national benchmarking of health system performance which increasingly involves comparisons of middle and high income countries. The planned application of quasi-experimental experimental designs using routine datasets in the project will be unique to Brazil. This will set an important new benchmark for conducting high quality policy evaluation using routine data sources in MICs.
In Brazil, understanding the implementation challenges and impacts of the ESF in large cities is vital - as much needed progress in achieving UHC in urban Brazil is threatened by constraints in public expenditure precipitated by economic crisis. Policy-makers in Brazil need confidence in programmes they fund and implement, including detailed understanding of the impact on populations' health and potential un-intended consequences. The political commitment to achieving UHC in Rio de Janeiro (RJ) is an exemplar for studying ESF impacts in urban Brazil and other countries where UHC progress lags in urban areas. Our study aims to contribute to the Brazilian and international PHC evidence through: i) understanding the implementation pathways to rapid PHC expansion in an urban and politically challenging environment; ii) providing in-depth estimates of the impact of the program on a wide range of health outcomes and sub-groups at greater detail than previous studies and using robust methods with casual inference (through the exploitation of individual-level PHC records); iii) supplementing quantitative analyses with qualitative understanding of ESF from patient and health professional perspectives, explaining and validating our findings; and iv) forecasting potential PHC policy scenarios in RJ and other Brazilian cities to highlight the potential impact on health from further expansion and inform policy direction.
The outcomes from this research study not only have the potential to influence global understanding of PHC programmes, but also establish a strong model for policy-maker and researcher relationships. This integrated research package will ensure policy-maker and implementers focus specific research questions to maximum relevance, whilst results can be quickly disseminated and inform implementation actions on the ground. There will be capacity building through joint management and sharing of different data sources, collaborative efforts towards a joint research goal, and improvements in the interface of the research translation pathway. By fostering links with departments with strong experience in micro-simulation and primary care hospital linked datasets, the project will expand local research capacity in Brazil and within partner institutions in the UK and US.
The project will create a novel dataset that links welfare benefit, health care, and mortality data, establishing a leading example of robust impact evaluations. This has been enabled by the investment in electronic medical records (EMRs) within the ESF expansion programme in RJ. The dataset is not only unique in Brazilian context but internationally - i.e. the UK's Clinical Practice Research Dataset has only recently linked PHC records to hospital admissions and mortality data, but has no data on welfare receipt status. The project therefore adds considerable value by creating a legacy dataset that will be available for ongoing policy evaluation and analyses. For example, the dataset will enable Brazil to participate in cross-national benchmarking of health system performance which increasingly involves comparisons of middle and high income countries. The planned application of quasi-experimental experimental designs using routine datasets in the project will be unique to Brazil. This will set an important new benchmark for conducting high quality policy evaluation using routine data sources in MICs.
Organisations
- Imperial College London (Lead Research Organisation)
- Harvard University (Collaboration)
- Pan American Health Organization (Collaboration)
- Institute for Health Policy Studies (IEPS) (Collaboration)
- Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (Collaboration)
- Centro de Integração de Dados e de Conhecimentos para Saúde (Collaboration)
- World Health Organization Regional Office for the Americas (Project Partner)
- Municipality of City of Rio de Janeiro (Project Partner)
Publications

Hone T
(2023)
Associations between primary healthcare and infant health outcomes: a cohort analysis of low-income mothers in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
in The Lancet Regional Health - Americas

Laverty AA
(2019)
Child awareness of and access to cigarettes: impacts of the point-of-sale display ban in England.
in Tobacco control


Hone T
(2022)
Expansion of primary healthcare and emergency hospital admissions among the urban poor in Rio de Janeiro Brazil: A cohort analysis
in The Lancet Regional Health - Americas

Hone T
(2017)
Large Reductions In Amenable Mortality Associated With Brazil's Primary Care Expansion And Strong Health Governance.
in Health affairs (Project Hope)

Hone T
(2020)
Primary healthcare expansion and mortality in Brazil's urban poor: A cohort analysis of 1.2 million adults.
in PLoS medicine


Coeli C
(2021)
Record linkage under suboptimal conditions for data-intensive evaluation of primary care in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
in BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making

Hone T
(2018)
Revisiting Alma-Ata: what is the role of primary health care in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals?
in Lancet (London, England)
Description | Nothing to update since the last submission |
Exploitation Route | No updates since the last submission |
Sectors | Healthcare |
Description | Addressing Health System Fragmentation to Advance Universal Health Coverage (UHC) for Low Income Populations in Latin America |
Amount | £99,493 (GBP) |
Funding ID | NIHR130136 |
Organisation | National Institute for Health Research |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2020 |
End | 05/2021 |
Description | MRC-CONFAP Call for Health Systems Research Networks |
Amount | £310,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Medical Research Council (MRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2018 |
End | 09/2020 |
Description | Urban violence and pacification in Rio's favelas: innovative approaches to measurement and quantifying health system impacts |
Amount | £191,000 (GBP) |
Funding ID | MR/V014420/1 |
Organisation | Medical Research Council (MRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2021 |
End | 02/2023 |
Title | Linked cohort of CadUnico Individuals with Hospitalisations, Mortality and Primary Care Records in Rio de Janeiro |
Description | Linkage of existing databases to generate longitudinal cohort. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2018 |
Provided To Others? | No |
Impact | will be used for ongoing evaluations |
Description | Brazil, PAHO, Harvard 30 years of SUS collaboration |
Organisation | Harvard University |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Providing input on a planned publication marking 30 years of SUS (Public Health System). Input included knowledge of Brazilian health system, public health policies and data systems. |
Collaborator Contribution | Leading and coordinating research project. |
Impact | meetings in Brazil, draft article |
Start Year | 2017 |
Description | Brazil, PAHO, Harvard 30 years of SUS collaboration |
Organisation | Harvard University |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Providing input on a planned publication marking 30 years of SUS (Public Health System). Input included knowledge of Brazilian health system, public health policies and data systems. |
Collaborator Contribution | Leading and coordinating research project. |
Impact | meetings in Brazil, draft article |
Start Year | 2017 |
Description | Brazil, PAHO, Harvard 30 years of SUS collaboration |
Organisation | Pan American Health Organization |
Country | United States |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | Providing input on a planned publication marking 30 years of SUS (Public Health System). Input included knowledge of Brazilian health system, public health policies and data systems. |
Collaborator Contribution | Leading and coordinating research project. |
Impact | meetings in Brazil, draft article |
Start Year | 2017 |
Description | Brazil, PAHO, Harvard 30 years of SUS collaboration |
Organisation | Pan American Health Organization |
Country | United States |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | Providing input on a planned publication marking 30 years of SUS (Public Health System). Input included knowledge of Brazilian health system, public health policies and data systems. |
Collaborator Contribution | Leading and coordinating research project. |
Impact | meetings in Brazil, draft article |
Start Year | 2017 |
Description | Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
Organisation | Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
Country | Brazil |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Inputs on database construction and analytical approaches to data analyses |
Collaborator Contribution | Data linkage expertise |
Impact | production of linked datasets for analysis |
Start Year | 2017 |
Description | Institute for Health Policy Studies (IEPS- Instituto de Estudos para Políticas) |
Organisation | Institute for Health Policy Studies (IEPS) |
Country | Brazil |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Started new collaborative research projects following on from work in Rio. |
Collaborator Contribution | Joint working on research |
Impact | Multi-disciplinary including public health and health economics. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | PHC quality and Infant health in Brazil |
Organisation | Centro de Integração de Dados e de Conhecimentos para Saúde |
Country | Brazil |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | Providing guidance and collaboration on research examining PHC quality and child health outcomes. |
Collaborator Contribution | Running main research project and analyses. |
Impact | Research ongoing. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | Forum debate at Folha de Sao Paulo Newspaper |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
Results and Impact | Presentation by Thomas Hone at the 5th Health Forum of the Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo (One of the largest in Brazil) on the Brazilian health system, health services and comparisons with other countries. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2018 |
URL | https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/seminariosfolha/2018/04/apesar-de-problemas-sus-e-referencia-em-saude-... |
Description | Presentation at CIDACS Salvador Brazil |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | Presentation on research projects and early findings to academics and public health professionals at CIDACs Brazil. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
Description | Presentation at PAHO Brazil on Public Health System |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Presentation on health systems research as part of an expert panel for policy-makers, governmental organisations, civil society and academics. Workshop was on future scenarios of the public health system in Brazil. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2017 |
Description | Presentation at State Secretaries for Health |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Presentation on UK and Brasilian health systems by Thomas Hone to state secretaries for health at their annual meeting in Brasilia April 2018 |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2018 |
URL | http://www.conass.org.br/conassdebate/?page_id=460 |