Regional governance arrangements of the Brazilian Unified National Health System: provider diversity and spacial inequality in service provision

Luciana Dias de Lima Mariana Vercesi de Albuquerque João Henrique Gurtler Scatena Enirtes Caetano Prates de Melo Evangelina Xavier Gouveia de Oliveira Marilia Sá Carvalho Adelyne Maria Mendes Pereira Ricardo Antunes Dantas de Oliveira Nereide Lucia Martinelli Clarice Furtado de Oliveira About the authors

Abstract

The study analyzes regional Brazilian Unified National Health System (SUS, in Portuguese) governance arrangements according to providers’ legal sphere and the spacial provision of middle and high-complexity services. These arrangements express the way in which State and health system reforms promoted the redistribution of functions between governmental and private entities in the territory. We carried out an exploratory study based on national-scope secondary data from 2015-2016. Using cluster analysis based on the composition of the provision percentages of the main providers, we classified 438 health regions. In middle-complexity health care, municipal public providers (outpatient) and private philanthropic providers (hospital) predominate. In high complexity provision, philanthropic and for-profit providers (outpatient and hospital) predominate. Middle-complexity provision was recorded in all health regions. However, in 12 states, more than half of the provision is concentrated in only one health region. High-complexity provision is concentrated in state capital regions. Governance arrangements may be more or less diverse and unequal, if different segments and regional concentration levels of middle and high-complexity provision are considered. The study suggests that the convergence between decentralization and mercantilization favored re-scaling of service provision, with increase in the scale of participation of private providers and strengthening of reference municipalities. Governance arrangement characteristics challenge SUS regionalization guided by the collective needs of the population.

Keywords:
Delivery of Health Care; Regional Health Planning; Governance; Private Sector; Health Policy


Introduction

In the international public policy literature, governance has been a frequent object of investigation, with different meanings, purposes and approaches 11. Rhodes RAW. The new governance: governing without government. Polit Stud (Oxf) 1996; XLIV:652-67.,22. Stoker G. Governance as theory: five propositions. Int Soc Sci J 1998; 50:17-28.,33. Levi-Faur D. The Oxford handbook of governance. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2012..

Especially in Latin America, Marques 44. Marques EC. Government, political, actors and governance in urban policies in Brazil and São Paulo: concepts for a future research agenda. Braz Political Sci Rev 2013; 7:8-35. identifies an association between the concept and two distinct forms of government organization. One is related to an increased participation of private agents in State functions and activities; the other points to society’s broader participation in decision-making processes. According to the author, though they point to different perspectives, in both meanings, the “State is viewed with suspicion”. These interpretations favor the dissemination of prescriptive views on governance, as synonymous with “good government”, one that is efficient, horizontalized and democratic. Additionally, they contributed to disseminating “fictions regarding public policies and the politics that surround them44. Marques EC. Government, political, actors and governance in urban policies in Brazil and São Paulo: concepts for a future research agenda. Braz Political Sci Rev 2013; 7:8-35. (p. 15), such as using governance as an alternative arrangement to traditional government institutions and the necessarily positive meaning attributed to governance.

Despite acknowledging these limitations, several works highlight the pertinence of governance as a category for analyzing public policy. The concept of governance is associated with “the act of governing policies” and its use enables us to call into question the meaning of this process amid recent changes in the exercise of power, which have favored the emergence of new actors and the simultaneous, autonomous and independent action of several public, private, and corporate groups and organizations 55. Schneider V. Redes de políticas públicas e a condução de sociedades complexas. Civitas 2005; 5:29-58.,66. Defarges PM. La gouvernance. Paris: PUF; 2008.. It therefore emphasizes the need to understand polycentric configurations of government arrangements that express greater or lesser State protagonism in the processes of designing, implementing and controlling policies.

This approach also enables us to question the interactions between State, market and society in systems endowed with varying degrees of institutionalization, assuming the existence of, at times, unclear limits between them and the incorporation of informal devices through which collective actions are guided 44. Marques EC. Government, political, actors and governance in urban policies in Brazil and São Paulo: concepts for a future research agenda. Braz Political Sci Rev 2013; 7:8-35.. Additionally, many studies value the territorial dimension of governance by incorporating forms of re-scaling the State’s actions, multiple government levels and spatial scales in their analysis of institutions and actors involved in policy processes 77. Brandão CA. Território e desenvolvimento: as múltiplas escalas entre o local e o global. Campinas: Editora da UNICAMP; 2007.,88. Kazepov Y. Rescaling social policies: towards multilevel governance in Europe. Burlington: Ashgate; 2010.,99. Smith A. Governança de múltiplos níveis: o que é e como pode ser estudada. In: Peters GG, Pierre J, organizador. Administração pública: coletânea. São Paulo: Editora Unesp; 2010. p. 619-36..

In studies on health policies, we can observe different connotations and uses of governance 1010. Barbazza E, Telo JE. A review of health governance: definitions, dimensions and tools to govern. Health Policy 2014; 116:1-11.,1111. Ciccone DK, Vian T, Maurer L, Bradley EH. Linking governance mechanisms to health outcomes: a review of the literature in low- and middle-income countries. Soc Sci Med 2014; 117:86-95.,1212. Pyone T, Smith H, Broek N. Frameworks to assess health systems governance: a systematic review. Health Policy Plan 2017; 32:710-22.. The concept’s dissemination took place starting in the 1990s, when movements in favor of reforming public health systems were intensifying and variations in the exercise of State authority started being observed 1313. Jakubowski E, Saltman RB. The changing national role in health system governance. A case-based study of 11 European countries and Australia. Brussels: The European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, World Health Organization; 2013.,1414. Greer SL, Jarman H, Azorsky A. A reorganisation you can see from space: the architecture of power in the new NHS. London: Centre for Health and Public Organization; 2014.. In Europe and Latin America, the changes favored a broader sphere of action for regional and local actors, the incorporation of market mechanisms into the public administration and the greater presence of the private sector in the funding, provision and regulation of actions and services 1515. Almeida C. Reforma do Estado e reforma de sistemas de saúde: experiências internacionais e tendências de mudança. Ciênc Saúde Colet 1999; 4:263-86.,1616. Giovanella L, Stegmuller K. Crise financeira europeia e sistemas de saúde: universalidade ameaçada? Tendências das reformas de saúde na Alemanha, Reino Unido e Espanha. Cad Saúde Pública 2014; 30:2263-81.,1717. Fleury S. The Welfare State in Latin America: reform, innovation and fatigue. Cad Saúde Pública 2017; 33 Suppl 2:e00058116.. In this context, concerns were raised with regard to the factors that condition reforms and their repercussions in terms of maintaining health systems’ public nature and the population’s health, with governance used at times as a way to evaluate the performance of specific organization and management models 1111. Ciccone DK, Vian T, Maurer L, Bradley EH. Linking governance mechanisms to health outcomes: a review of the literature in low- and middle-income countries. Soc Sci Med 2014; 117:86-95.,1818. Nuti S, Vola F, Bonini A, Vainieri M. Making governance work in the health care sector: evidence from a "natural experiment" in Italy. Health Econ Policy Law 2016; 11:17-38.,1919. Ramesh M, Wu X, He AJ. Health governance and healthcare reforms in China. Health Policy Plan 2014; 29:663-72.,2020. Repullo JR, Freire JM. Implementando estrategias para mejorar el gobierno institucional del Sistema Nacional de Salud. Gac Sanit 2016; 30:3-8. and at times as an analytical method for understanding policies 2121. Hufty M, Báscolo E, Bazzani R. Gobernanza en salud: un aporte conceptual y analítico para la investigación. Cad Saúde Pública 2006; 22 Suppl:S35-45.,2222. Hufty M. Gobernanza en salud pu´blica: hacia un marco anali´tico. Rev Salud Pública 2010; 12 Suppl 1:39-61..

Based on this discussion, the article seeks to analyze regional Brazilian Unified National Health System (SUS, in Portuguese) governance arrangements, according to providers’ legal sphere and the spatial provision of middle and high-complexity services in Brazil.

Regional governance arrangements encompass the actors, structures and processes that shape the exercise of authority and policy decisions within the territory 33. Levi-Faur D. The Oxford handbook of governance. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2012.. Among the many dimensions and aspects of governance arrangements, this study prioritized the analysis of the composition of public (federal, state and municipal) and private (for profit and not for profit) establishments that predominate in the SUS specialized care segments, in different spatial scales. We consider that the configurations of the public-private mix of service provision express the way in which State and health system reforms promoted the redistribution of functions between governmental and private entities in the Brazilian territory 2323. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD. Regionalização e relações federativas na política de saúde do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Contra Capa; 2011..

The justification for the study’s approach is based on two main arguments. The first is related to the understanding of care provision as an economic and spatial dimension of the health policy’s power. We highlight the expressive volume of visits and public expenditures in specialized care 2424. Solla J, Chioro A. Atenção ambulatorial especializada. In: Giovanella L, Escorel S, Lobato LVC, Noronha JC, Carvalho I, organizadores. Políticas e sistema de saúde no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2012. p. 547-76., the many interest groups mobilized around it and its importance in conforming health care networks within SUS 2525. Mendes EV. Comentários sobre as Redes de Atenção à Saúde no SUS. Saúde Debate 2014; (52):38-49.. Thus, the legal sphere of middle and high-complexity providers matters for understanding governance, given the identification of the main public and private actors responsible for providing these services. The second refers to the specificity of the health policy trajectory over the past three decades and its ramifications for regional health governance in Brazil. The implementation of SUS was influenced by different factors and competing projects which favored the expansion in public service offer concomitantly with transformations in the economic dynamics and the growth of the supplementary private sector 2626. Machado CV, Lima LD, Baptista TWF. Políticas de saúde no Brasil em tempos contraditórios: caminhos e tropeços na construção de um sistema universal. Cad Saúde Pública 2017; 33 Suppl 2:e00129616.. Additionally, associated mercantilization and decentralization processes led to the diversification of actors (public and private) in public service management and provision, and to the establishment of different regional SUS governance arrangements 2727. Viana ALd'A, Miranda AS, Silva HP. Segmentos institucionais de gestão em saúde: descrição, tendências e cenários prospectivos. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 151-88.,2828. Lima LD, Scatena JHG, Albuquerque MV, Oliveira RAD, Martinelli NL, Pereira AMM. Arranjos de governança da assistência especializada nas regiões de saúde do Brasil. Rev Bras Saúde Matern Infant 2017; 17 Suppl 1:S107-19..

From different perspectives, some studies have sought to explore the intergovernmental and public-private relationships that permeate SUS governance in the states and health regions 2323. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD. Regionalização e relações federativas na política de saúde do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Contra Capa; 2011.,2828. Lima LD, Scatena JHG, Albuquerque MV, Oliveira RAD, Martinelli NL, Pereira AMM. Arranjos de governança da assistência especializada nas regiões de saúde do Brasil. Rev Bras Saúde Matern Infant 2017; 17 Suppl 1:S107-19.,2929. Vianna RP, Lima LD. Colegiados de gestão regional no estado do Rio de Janeiro: atores, estratégias e negociação intergovernamental. Physis (Rio J.) 2013; 23:1025-49.,3030. Santos AM, Giovanella L. Governança regional: estratégias e disputas para gestão em saúde. Rev Saúde Pública 2014; 48:622-31.,3131. Kehrig RT, Souza ES, Scatena JHG. Institucionalidade e governança da regionalização da saúde: o caso da região Sul Mato-Grossense à luz das atas do colegiado de gestão. Saúde Debate 2015; 39:948-61.,3232. Heloisa G, Andrade SR, Mello ALSF. Rede regionalizada de atenção à saúde no Estado de Santa Catarina, Brasil, entre 2011e 2015: sistema de governança e a atenção à saúde bucal. Cad Saúde Pública 2017; 33:e00133516.. However, for the most part, studies analyze one or a few cases, or prioritize a certain spatial scale (state, regional or local). The meaning and repercussions of this process on the national territory and on a multi-scale perspective remain under-explored.

This study was guided by the following questions: how are the regional SUS government arrangements configured in terms of the public and private middle and high-complexity providers? What are the conditioning factors and possible implications of these arrangements, considering the spatial distribution of specialized care in Brazil?

Methods

This is an exploratory study based on national-scope secondary data originating in the Health Ministry’s health information systems, made available by the SUS Informatics Department (DATASUS; http://datasus.saude.gov.br/) and referring to the provision of middle and high-complexity outpatient and hospital services. Middle and high-complexity care, due to its particularities, was used as a proxy of the diversity of actors, both public and private, that act within SUS and of the relationship they establish with one another.

Middle and high-complexity outpatient procedures and hospital admissions are those classified as such in the “complexity” selection of the SUS Ambulatory Information System (SIA-SUS) and Hospital Information System (SIH-SUS). Although there is a near-infinite number of outpatient procedures classified as middle complexity, and though their occurrence in Brazilian states is diverse, in the two year period we studied, 95% of them were concentrated in: consultations, laboratory and imaging exams and physiotherapy. Likewise, middle-complexity hospital admissions encompass a wide variety of procedures which, for the most part (63%), included: diverse clinical treatments, delivery/birth and obstetric surgery.

The high-complexity outpatient care includes groups that encompass the following procedures: (1) diagnostic; (2) clinical; (3) surgical; (4) organ, tissue and cell transplants; and (5) medications. We did not include the medication group in this study for a few reasons: (a) medication dispensation is not comparable to the other procedures; (b) in 15 states, this procedure only takes place in the capital; (c) it falls under state responsibility in almost all municipalities and health regions; (d) since this group represents 95% of all procedures, its inclusion would make it impossible for us to apprehend the diversity of actors who participate in the provision of the others. With regard to high-complexity admissions, they encompass the first four procedure groups mentioned above.

The data we analyzed refer to the years 2015-2016. This choice was based on the homogeneity of the variables we selected for analysis and on reducing the influence of a possible casual variation by aggregating two subsequent years.

From SIA-SUS, we extracted data regarding the middle and high-complexity outpatient production, both according to the location where care took place (approved quantity) and their processing considered: (a) the spatial scale: macro-region, state/Federal District, health region; (b) legal sphere responsible for providing the service: public administration (federal, state/Federal District, municipal and others), not-for-profit entities, other corporate entities; (c) the concentration of outpatient care in the health regions of all states and the Federal District. The health regions correspond to a specific spatial division at the state level which were formally established for SUS planning, negotiation and intergovernmental management 2323. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD. Regionalização e relações federativas na política de saúde do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Contra Capa; 2011..

Fom SIH-SUS, we extracted data related to middle and high-complexity hospital admissions (approved Hospital Admission Authorizations - AIH), by location of hospital admission and considering the same variables detailed above, related to spatial scale, legal sphere and concentration.

We calculated the percentages of the middle and high-complexity outpatient and hospital production in the period 2015-2016 for each health region according to the categorization of the main providers: public federal (PF); public state/Federal District (PS); public municipal (PM); private not-for-profit or philanthropic (PrP); private for-profit (PrFPP).

The data analysis was carried out in two dimensions in order to assess: (1) the profiles of public and private providers in the regions; (2) the regional concentration of service provision. We carried out a cluster analysis in order to classify regions into groups constructed based on the similarity of regional profiles (established by the composition of the percentages of the production according to the main provider categories) and by the difference to the profiles of regions classified into the other groups. We ran the set of regions through a cluster analysis using the k-medoids method (partitioning around medoids 3333. Kaufman L, Rousseeuw PJ. Finding groups in data: an introduction to cluster analysis. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons; 2009.) through a joint analysis of five indicators (proportion of FP, SP, MP, Ppr and FPPr providers) calculated based on the middle and high-complexity outpatient and hospital production. Partitioning around medoids enabled us to group health regions according to characteristics shared by the main providers (intra-group homogeneity and inter-group heterogeneity).

We created maps to represent the groups created through the k-medoids method, of the four care segments we analyzed (middle and high-complexity outpatient and hospital care). We used graphic visualization methods and the functions fviz_nbclust and hcut (available in the Factoextra package; https://cran.r-project.org/package=factoextra) to support the assessment of the optimal number of groups. We used the municipal grid of the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE, in Portuguese) aggregated according to health region, available in the DATASUS page. The analysis encompassed the 438 health regions, which vary greatly in terms of number of municipalities, ranging from 1 to 42 (the Federal District alone is a health region). For data processing, we used the free software R (https://www.r-project.org), in the RStudio environment, and using the packages Cluster (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages=cluster), Factoextra (graphic visualization methods and the functions fviz_nbclust and hcut were used to support the assessment of the optimal number of groups) and Glue (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages=glue).

We assessed the regional concentration through the percentage of the middle and high-complexity outpatient and hospital production in each health regions, with the total production of the state (and the Federal District) of each service as the denominator. These data were tabulated and organized into graphs using the software Excel (https://products.office.com/).

Results

Territorial diversity of public and private provider profiles

In outpatient care, the cluster analysis identified four classification profiles for middle complexity and six for high complexity. In hospital care, the health regions had three profiles for middle complexity and eight clearly distinct profiles for high complexity. Each group reflects characteristics shared by the health regions and, consequently, configure the regions’ general pattern and the best possible approximation for each situation, given the diversity of the empirical basis we investigated.

Table 1 presents the medians of the variables used to characterize the provider groups in each service provision segment, as well as the number of regions contained in each group. In outpatient care, the main group among the health regions (41.1%) was Group 2 (predominance of municipal provider) and the municipal provider had high medians in all groups. In middle-complexity hospital care, Group 3 (predominance of philanthropic provider) encompassed most health regions (45.7%). Philanthropic providers were also strongly present in the other groupss in this segment, along with municipal providers (Group 1) or with state and municipal providers (Group 2).

In high-complexity outpatient care, Group 2 (predominance of for-profit private provider) encompassed 32.2% of health regions, while Group 6 (predominance of philanthropic provider) encompassed 24.6% (Table 1). With regard to high-complexity hospital care, the pattern we observed had the lowest composition diversity of predominant providers and Group 8 (predominance of private philanthropic provider) included the greatest number of health regions (36.1%). In both high complexity segments, we found a high proportion of regions characterized by scarcity/lack of providers (9.8% of regions in outpatient care and 21.5% in hospital care).

Table 1
Medians of all indicators included in the analysis, according to classification group. Brazil, 2015-2016.

The spatial distribution of the four middle-complexity outpatient care provider groups shows that: (a) state providers (Group 1) had a larger presence in the health regions located in states in the North macro-region; (b) municipal providers (Group 2) predominated in the health regions in the North and Central and also had an expressive participation in the Northeast; (c) although in conjunction with municipal providers (Groups 3 and 4), private - philanthropic and/or for profit - providers were especially predominant in the health regions in the South, Southeast and part of the Northeast (Figure 1).

Figure 1
Middle-complexity outpatient production: distribution of health regions according to provider groups. Brazil, 2015-2016.

Private philanthropic providers (Group 3) predominate in the health regions of states in the South and Southeast in middle-complexity hospital care (Figure 2). On the other hand, public municipal and/or state providers (Groups 1 and 2) predominate in the North, Northeast and Central (except in the states of Ceará and Mato Grosso do Sul) always followed in importance by philanthropic providers. State providers were relevant in the health regions in the North (except those in Pará), in Piauí and Pernambuco, while municipal providers predominated in the regions in the Central and many states in the Northeast.

Figure 2
Middle-complexity hospital production: distribution of health regions according to provider clusters. Brazil, 2015-2016.

In the high-complexity outpatient care, the set of six groups informs (Figure 3): (a) scarcity or lack of predominant providers (Group 3) in all macro-regions, although with different magnitudes and locations, depending on the state; (b) greater importance of public providers (Groups 1 and 5) in the health regions of the states that make up Legal Amazon; (c) prominence of philanthropic and for-profit private providers in all macro-regions, whether along with state public providers (Group 4), or dominating provision (Groups 2 and 6); (d) predominance of philanthropic private providers (Group 6) in the health regions in the South and Southeast, in comparison with those in the Northeast, where the frequency of the private for-profit providers (Group 2) was greater.

Figure 3
High-complexity outpatient production: distribution of health regions according to provider clusters. Brazil, 2015-2016.

Finally, in addition to the greater scarcity or lack of predominant providers in all macro-regions and most states (Group 3), the eight groups of high-complexity hospital care showed particular situations: (a) predominance of private providers (Groups 6, 7 and 8) in the health regions located in the Southeast, South and part of the Center-West; (b) predominance of public state and/or municipal providers in half of the north of Brazil, in isolation (Groups 1 and 2) or alongside private philanthropic providers (Group 4); (c) predominance of the federal public provider (Group 5) in one or two health regions of some states (Amazonas, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul); (d) marked presence of the private philanthropic provider which, in isolation (Group 8) or along with for-profit providers (Group 7), is distributed through health regions across the entire national territory, except for the North region; (e) care voids (Group 3) concentrated in the North, Central and Northeast (Figure 4).

Figure 4
High-complexity hospital production: distribution of health regions according to provider clusters. Brazil, 2015-2016.

Regional concentration of care provision

The provision of middle-complexity outpatient care, in 2015-2016, was recorded by 5,162 municipalities (92.7% of existing municipalities) and in all 438 Brazilian health regions.

The states with the highest percentage of regional concentration of middle-complexity outpatient production were those in which a single region had more than 50% of the entire state production. Excluding the Federal District, due to its particularity, twelve states were in this situation: five in the North macro-region, four in the Northeast, Rio de Janeiro and Mato Grosso do Sul (Figure 5). The highest concentration percentages were recorded in the region which includes the state capital.

On the other hand, the bigger the number of regions dividing the production, the lower the concentration. Thus, the least concentrated states were Santa Catarina, Minas Gerais, Rio Grande do Sul, São Paulo, Mato Grosso and Goiás. In the first, 13 regions were responsible for 51.5% of the production; in the others, 48.5% was diluted in three regions.

Figure 5
Distribution of the number of health regions and their percentages * of middle-complexity outpatient production in the states and the Federal District. Brazil, 2015-2016.

With regard to hospital care, there were middle-complexity admissions in 3,277 municipalities (58.8%), distributed across all 438 health regions.

Concentration was also present in this segment, but was smaller when compared to that of outpatient care. In 11 states, a single region concentrated more than 50% of admissions. States in the North (Roraima, Amapá, Acre, Amazonas) and Northeast (Pernambuco, Sergipe) had the highest concentration percentages (Figure 6), which were always found in the region that contained the state capital. On the other hand, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Bahia, Minas Gerais, Maranhão and São Paulo were the states with the lowest concetration of middle-complexity hospital care, that is, 73.4% to 100% of all of these admissions took place in an expressive number of health regions.

Figure 6
Distribution of the number of health regions and their percentages * of middle-complexity hospital production in the states and the Federal District. Brazil, 2015-2016.

As for the high-complexity outpatient care, the number of municipalities that provided it (1,020) was much smaller, corresponding to 18.3% of the total. However, this production was registered in 399 health regions (91.1%), though concentrated in a small number of municipalities, usually the state capital and regional reference municipalities. On the other hand, high complexity admissions took place in 668 municipalities (12%) and 350 health regions (79.9%), reflecting a higher concentration of this care and ratifying care voids.

In general, high-complexity care (outpatient and hospital) is extremely concentrated in the regions which include the state capitals. This was the rule in the states of the North, Northeast and Central. This concentration was only slightly smaller in the states of the South, in addition to Minas Gerais and São Paulo.

Discussion

The study showed significant differences in the amount and composition of providers involved in the regional SUS governance arrangements. In the case of middle-complexity outpatient care, the main provider is municipal, jointly with the state, especially in the North macro-region, or with private providers, especially philanthropic, in the South, Southeast, Northeast and part of the Central. However, when the production is less concentrated (such as in the South and Southeast), the profile of the predominant providers is more diversified, involving public (municipal and state) and private (philanthropic and for-profit) spheres. The only exception was the Northeast, because, in most states located in this macro-region, there is a high concentration of the production (more than 50% in a single health region). Even so, there is great diversity of provider profiles in the health regions.

On the other hand, in the middle-complexity hospital production, in comparison with the outpatient care, we found a lower spatial concentration and lower diversity of predominant providers, in which municipal and philanthropic providers stand out.

In high-complexity care (outpatient and hospital), although there is a higher number of groups, the diversity of providers that predominate in a given health region is smaller, denoting a certain functional specialization among health establishments. This characteristic is associated with the existence of care voids in all macro-regions and an important concentration of care provision in a few reference municipalities and in a few health establishments.

In general, middle-complexity is less spatially concentrated, when compared with high complexity 3434. Santos IS, Pessôa LR, Machado JP, Martins ACM, Lima CRA. Os recursos físicos de saúde no Brasil: um olhar para o futuro. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 63-111., and the provision of both outpatient and hospital services was registered in all 438 regions of the country. This fact may be related to investment and expansion efforts directed at the public and private SUS offer at this level of care, resulting from regionalization strategies developed in states starting in the 2000s 3535. Albuquerque MV, Viana ALd'A, Lima LD, Ferreira MP, Fusaro ER, Iozzi FL. Desigualdades regionais na saúde: mudanças observadas no Brasil de 2000 a 2016. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2017; 22:1055-64.. However, in outpatient care, there is still a high spatial concentration of certain types of diagnostic and therapeutic support services, such as ultrasounds, diagnostic methods in specialties and radiology, which are not offered in a large number of health regions. On the other hand, hospital care, slightly less concentrated, may be related to the existence and scope of small-size hospitals, which expanded in municipalities and, as a rule, are limited to births and clinical treatments 3434. Santos IS, Pessôa LR, Machado JP, Martins ACM, Lima CRA. Os recursos físicos de saúde no Brasil: um olhar para o futuro. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 63-111.,3636. Ugá MAD, Lopez EM. Os hospitais de pequeno porte e sua inserção no SUS. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2007; 12:915-28..

Studies have shown that the scarcity of service offer and its high concentration in a small number of municipalities in health regions tend to exacerbate intergovernmental conflicts, as well as conflicts between public and private sectors, in the organization of health care 2828. Lima LD, Scatena JHG, Albuquerque MV, Oliveira RAD, Martinelli NL, Pereira AMM. Arranjos de governança da assistência especializada nas regiões de saúde do Brasil. Rev Bras Saúde Matern Infant 2017; 17 Suppl 1:S107-19.. The existence of conflicts results from a dispute over scarce resources (human and financial) and from the influence of the many providers in a single health region. In the case of regions where public federal, state and municipal providers predominate, the divergences are expressed in the dynamics of intergovernmental health policy relationships and, especially, in the negotiations established within the Regional Inter-Manager Commissions. In the regions where there is a greater diversity of health establishments, conflicts include the interaction between public and private in service provision 2828. Lima LD, Scatena JHG, Albuquerque MV, Oliveira RAD, Martinelli NL, Pereira AMM. Arranjos de governança da assistência especializada nas regiões de saúde do Brasil. Rev Bras Saúde Matern Infant 2017; 17 Suppl 1:S107-19..

Other studies indicate that health regions marked by the concentration of production in a few private providers have governance arrangements that are less diverse and less conflicting 3737. Bousquat A, Giovanella L, Campos EMS, Almeida PF, Martins CL, Mota PHS, et al. Atenção primária à saúde e coordenação do cuidado nas regiões de saúde: perspectiva de gestores e usuários. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2017; 22:1141-54.. This pattern reflects the coordinating and agglutinating power over regional policies and interests acquired by some companies, due to the resource concentration, scope and spatial reach of their actions 3838. Santos M. Da política dos estados à política das empresas. Cadernos da Escola do Legislativo 1998; 3:9-23..

The predominance of private (philanthropic and/or for profit) and municipal providers in most health regions and regional reference municipalities suggests a convergence between the processes of decentralization and mercantilization and the confluence of public and private interests in the provision of middle and high-complexity services in SUS. The participation of the private sector in the provision of public services and the fusion of public and private interests in health are not new, and they are conditioned by a long historical trajectory that shaped social security-funded health care in Brazil 3939. Menicucci TMC. Público e privado na política de assistência à saúde no Brasil: atores, processos e trajetória. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2007.. With the implementation of SUS and the intensification of decentralization in the 1990s, this process took on a new form.

Decentralization enabled the expansion of public and private establishments in some municipalities that took on greater autonomy in managing federal financial transferences earmarked for middle and high-complexity care in SUS 4040. Viana ALd'A, Heimann LS, Lima LD, Oliveira RG, Rodrigues SH. Mudanças significativas no processo de descentralização do sistema de saúde no Brasil. Cad Saúde Pública 2002; 18 Suppl:S139-51.. Starting in the 2000s, the regionalization process reinforced public-private partnerships and articulations involving governments and providers at the state and regional scales 4141. Santos AM, Giovanella L. Governança regional: estratégias e disputas para gestão em saúde. Rev Saúde Pública 2014; 48:622-631.,4242. Almeida APS, Lima LD. O público e o privado no processo de regionalização da saúde no Espírito Santo. Saúde Debate 2015; 39 Suppl:51-63.,4343. Romano CMC, Scatena JHG, Kehrig RT. Articulação público-privada na atenção ambulatorial de média e alta complexidade do SUS: atuação da Secretaria de Estado de Saúde de Mato Grosso. Physis (Rio J.) 2015; 25:1095-115. in a new context of: expansion of federal and state investments 2323. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD. Regionalização e relações federativas na política de saúde do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Contra Capa; 2011.; diversification of management models in service provision (including new forms of outsourcing, such as through Social Organizations) 2727. Viana ALd'A, Miranda AS, Silva HP. Segmentos institucionais de gestão em saúde: descrição, tendências e cenários prospectivos. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 151-88.; and protagonism of some private providers (especially philanthropic providers in the hospital and diagnostic and therapeutic support segments) 3737. Bousquat A, Giovanella L, Campos EMS, Almeida PF, Martins CL, Mota PHS, et al. Atenção primária à saúde e coordenação do cuidado nas regiões de saúde: perspectiva de gestores e usuários. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2017; 22:1141-54.. As a result of these processes, the interdependence between the public and private sectors in health care is increasingly significant in Brazil 4444. Bahia L. Trinta anos de Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS): uma transição necessária, mas insuficiente. Cad Saúde Pública 2018; 34:e00067218.. To this are added the attribution of countless public functions to private entities, the delegation of control over, and monitoring of, public actions to private or civil organizations and the strong imbrication of public and private funding in health policy 2626. Machado CV, Lima LD, Baptista TWF. Políticas de saúde no Brasil em tempos contraditórios: caminhos e tropeços na construção de um sistema universal. Cad Saúde Pública 2017; 33 Suppl 2:e00129616..

Decentralization and regionalization have also had a contradictory effect on existing inequalities. Although these processes have led to advances in the expansion and improvement of access to primary health care, regional differences in the offer of middle and high-complexity services remain significant 3434. Santos IS, Pessôa LR, Machado JP, Martins ACM, Lima CRA. Os recursos físicos de saúde no Brasil: um olhar para o futuro. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 63-111.,3535. Albuquerque MV, Viana ALd'A, Lima LD, Ferreira MP, Fusaro ER, Iozzi FL. Desigualdades regionais na saúde: mudanças observadas no Brasil de 2000 a 2016. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2017; 22:1055-64. and hinder the formation of health care networks 4545. Xavier DR, Matos VP, Magalhães MAFM, Bellido JG, Velasco WD, Viacava F. Polos e fluxos de deslocamento de pacientes para internação hospitalar e procedimentos selecionados no Sistema Único de Saúde. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 113-49..

The State-market relationship in SUS service provision expresses the increasingly more intense penetration of capital in all spatial scales, which tends to value and increase regional differences 77. Brandão CA. Território e desenvolvimento: as múltiplas escalas entre o local e o global. Campinas: Editora da UNICAMP; 2007.,4646. Araújo TB. Tendências do desenvolvimento regional recente no Brasil. In: Brandão CA, Siqueira H, organizadores. Pacto federativo, integração nacional e desenvolvimento regional. São Paulo: Editora Fundação Perseu Abramo; 2013. p. 39-51.. In health care, the socioeconomic profiles of the population, the density and integration of urban networks and the wealth of the different regions are preponderant factors in the context of the valorisation of capital 3535. Albuquerque MV, Viana ALd'A, Lima LD, Ferreira MP, Fusaro ER, Iozzi FL. Desigualdades regionais na saúde: mudanças observadas no Brasil de 2000 a 2016. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2017; 22:1055-64.. However, in recent years, private establishments have increased their capacity to act regionally due to the re-scaling of philanthropic and for-profit providers. The accentuation of differences is the result of the reiterated spacial concentration of investments, which reinforces socioeconomic and regional inequalities 4646. Araújo TB. Tendências do desenvolvimento regional recente no Brasil. In: Brandão CA, Siqueira H, organizadores. Pacto federativo, integração nacional e desenvolvimento regional. São Paulo: Editora Fundação Perseu Abramo; 2013. p. 39-51..

Since the 1990s, public providers have increased their actions at the local scale, especially through municipal or municipally-managed establishments 4747. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD, Oliveira RG. Descentralização e federalismo: a política de saúde em novo contexto - lições do caso brasileiro. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2002; 7:493-507.. With the regionalization of the 2000s and 2010s, state governments broadened their functions, and establishments under state management once again started to expand 2323. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD. Regionalização e relações federativas na política de saúde do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Contra Capa; 2011., but, largely speaking, public providers predominate in regions with less market participation (or interest), such as part of the North and the rural Northeast.

Regional inequalities also influence the SUS regionalization process. Regionalization presupposes a de-concentration of production, with greater balance in terms of the negotiation power between the reference and the other municipalities, cooperation from the state entity and greater coordination between government levels 2323. Viana ALd'A, Lima LD. Regionalização e relações federativas na política de saúde do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Contra Capa; 2011.. However, inequality generates tensions and conflicts because there is a dispute over scarce resources, which hinders the establishment of a solidary relationship between the reference municipality and the other municipalities at the regional level. On the other hand, the municipalities’ protagonism in middle and high-complexity provision in the region reinforces the concentration of power at the reference municipality and the local logic of organizing care networks. Added to this is the weight of private providers that act especially based on bilateral negotiations with each government entity, which does not necessarily strengthen the regional logic and public command over the organization of care networks 3030. Santos AM, Giovanella L. Governança regional: estratégias e disputas para gestão em saúde. Rev Saúde Pública 2014; 48:622-31.. In a context of State regulatory fragility 4848. Grau NC. O que tem acontecido com o público nos últimos trinta anos? In: Menicucci T, Gontijo JGL, organizadores. Gestão e políticas públicas no cenário contemporâneo: tendências nacionais e internacionais. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 325-55., there is a concentration of influence power and broadening of the regional action scale of private providers.

This study suggests the complexity of regional SUS governance arrangements, which enables us to understand some of the main challenges facing the system’s regionalization that were indicated by governments 4949. Carvalho ALB, Jesus WLA, Senra IMVB. Regionalização no SUS: processo de implementação, desafios e perspectivas na visão crítica de gestores do sistema. Ciênc Saúde Colet 2017; 22:1155-64.: (1) the incipient integration of actions and services; (2) the difficulties for regulating the system; (3) inequalities in service offer and access; (4) dispute over scarce resources in the regions.

Lastly, some of the article’s limitations should be mentioned. The choice to analyze SUS governance through service provision (legal sphere and spatial distribution of production) did not allow us to discuss other dimensions and aspects that are equally relevant for understanding the exercise of power within health policy. Additionally, the variable “legal sphere”, used to categorize providers, is insufficient for identifying the hybrid forms of management of public and private establishments that currently exist within SUS 2727. Viana ALd'A, Miranda AS, Silva HP. Segmentos institucionais de gestão em saúde: descrição, tendências e cenários prospectivos. In: Noronha JC, Lima LD, Chorny AH, Dal Poz MR, Gadelha P, organizadores. Brasil Saúde Amanhã: dimensões para o planejamento da atenção à saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2017. p. 151-88.. We highlight that, starting in 2014, new power structures emerged as a consequence of changes in the economic dynamics of the health sector 5050. Bahia L. Financeirização da assistência médico-hospitalar no Governo Lula. In: Machado CV, Baptista TWF, Lima LD, organizadores. Políticas de saúde no Brasil: continuidades e mudanças. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2012. p. 91-113. and of rearticulations between different private (especially philanthropic hospitals) and public organizations 5151. Mattos L, Sestelo J, Braga I, Travassos C, Bahia L, Scheffer M. Febraplan e a disputa real pelo sistema de saúde universal: considerações sobre a atuação recente do setor privado nas políticas saúde. http://www.iesc.ufrj.br/gpdes/images/arquivos/PrivadoNaSaude.pdf (acessado em Mai/2018).
http://www.iesc.ufrj.br/gpdes/images/arq...
. As a result, other studies with different approaches and focuses are needed to deepen health policy governance in Brazil.

These limitations do not compromise this article’s contributions. The methodological approach we adopted enabled a creative use of the available secondary data, as well the summary and innovative presentation of regional governance arrangements that involve middle and high-complexity provision in SUS.

Conclusion

In Brazil, the SUS governance arrangements can be more or less diverse and unequal, when considering the provider composition and degrees of regional concentration of production in the middle and high-complexity segments in different spatial scales. Of special significance are many multilevel (federal, state and municipal), hybrid (public and private) and polarized (regional concentration) patterns of this service provision in the macro-regions, states/Federal District and health regions.

The degrees of regional concentration of production are related to SUS governance arrangements. The general trend we found is that of scarcity and high concentration with lower diversity of predominant provider composition in the higher complexity segments.

The study suggests that the convergence between decentralization and mercantilization in the country’s State and health system reform processes favored the re-scaling of service provision, with an increase in the scale of participation of philanthropic and for-profit private providers and strengthening of reference municipalities.

The regional SUS governance arrangements are characterized by the diversity of public and private providers and by the unequal spatial distribution of service provision. These aspects challenge regionalization guided by the collective needs of the population, at different regional scales.

Acknowledgments

The article received support from the the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation and from the Ministry of Health through the grant MCTI/CNPq/CT - Saúde/MS/SCTIE/Decit n. 41/2013. L. D. Lima and M. S. Carvalho are productivity grand recipients from the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq).

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    13 June 2019
  • Date of issue
    2019

History

  • Received
    14 May 2018
  • Reviewed
    19 Sept 2018
  • Accepted
    01 Oct 2018
Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública Sergio Arouca, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: cadernos@ensp.fiocruz.br