Social Outcomes Contracting (SOC) in Social Programmes and Public Services: A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review Protocol

Vanessa Picker, E. Carter, M. Airoldi, James Ronicle, Rachel Wooldridge, Joseph Llewellyn, Lilly Monk, Sophia Stone, Michael Gibson, Franziska Rosenbach, Tanyah Hameed
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Although promising, evidence suggests that there are risks (especially around managing perverse incentives).[1] The growing interest in SOC has been accompanied by research of specific programmes, policy domains or geographies, but there has not been a systematic attempt to synthetise this emerging evidence. To address this gap, this systematic review aims to surface the best evidence on when and where effects have been associated with SOC.  \nMethods: This mixed-methods systematic review protocol has been prepared using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Protocol (PRISMA-P) guidelines (Additional File 2) (Shamseer et al., 2010). The review aims to consult policymakers throughout the evidence synthesis process, by adopting a user-involved research process. This will include the establishment and involvement of a Policy Advisory Group (PAG). The PAG will consist of a large, diverse, international group of policy makers who are or have been actively involved in funding and shaping social outcomes contracts (Additional File 3). The following electronic databases will be searched: ABI/INFORM Global, Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA), Scopus, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), PAIS Index, PolicyFile Index, Proquest Dissertations and Theses, ProQuest Social Science, Social Services Abstracts, Web of Science, Worldwide Political Science Abstracts and PsycINFO. We will also conduct a comprehensive search of grey literature sources. Studies will be imported into Covidence and screened (after de-duplication) independently by two reviewers, using explicit inclusion/exclusion criteria. We will conduct risk of bias and quality assessment using recommended tools and we will extract data using a pre-piloted, standardised data extraction form. If meta-synthesis cannot be conducted for the effectiveness component, we will carry out a descriptive narrative synthesis of the quantitative evidence, categorised by type of intervention, type of outcome/s, population characteristics and/or policy sector. The qualitative studies will be synthesised using thematic content analysis (Thomas and Harden 2008). If possible, we will also analyse the available economic data to understand the costs and benefits associated with SOC. Finally, we will conduct a cross-study synthesis, which will involve bringing together the findings from the effectiveness review, economic review and qualitative review. We recognise that the proposed conventional effectiveness review method may lead to inconclusive or partial findings given the complexity of the intervention, the likely degree of heterogeneity and the under-developed evidence base. We see a traditional systematic review as an important foundation to describe the evidence landscape. We will use this formal review as a starting point and then explore more contextually rooted review work in future. \nDiscussion: We will use the systematic review findings to produce accessible and reliable empirical insights on whether, when, and where (and if possible, how) SOC approaches deliver improved impact when compared to more conventional funding arrangements. The outputs will support policymakers to make informed decisions in relation to commissioning and funding approaches. \nSystematic   review   registration: This   systematic review was registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO), on 20th November 2020 and was last updated on 21 January 2021: (registration number PROSPERO CRD42020215207). \n[1] A perverse incentive in an outcomes-based contract is an incentive that has unintended and undesirable results. 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Abstract

Background: Across a range of policy areas and geographies, governments and philanthropists are increasingly looking to adopt a social outcomes contracting (SOC) approach. Under this model, an agreement is made that a provider of services must achieve specific, measurable social and/or environmental outcomes and payments are only made when these outcomes have been achieved. Despite this growing interest, there is currently a paucity of evidence in relation to the tangible improvement in outcomes associated with the implementation of these approaches. Although promising, evidence suggests that there are risks (especially around managing perverse incentives).[1] The growing interest in SOC has been accompanied by research of specific programmes, policy domains or geographies, but there has not been a systematic attempt to synthetise this emerging evidence. To address this gap, this systematic review aims to surface the best evidence on when and where effects have been associated with SOC.  Methods: This mixed-methods systematic review protocol has been prepared using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Protocol (PRISMA-P) guidelines (Additional File 2) (Shamseer et al., 2010). The review aims to consult policymakers throughout the evidence synthesis process, by adopting a user-involved research process. This will include the establishment and involvement of a Policy Advisory Group (PAG). The PAG will consist of a large, diverse, international group of policy makers who are or have been actively involved in funding and shaping social outcomes contracts (Additional File 3). The following electronic databases will be searched: ABI/INFORM Global, Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA), Scopus, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), PAIS Index, PolicyFile Index, Proquest Dissertations and Theses, ProQuest Social Science, Social Services Abstracts, Web of Science, Worldwide Political Science Abstracts and PsycINFO. We will also conduct a comprehensive search of grey literature sources. Studies will be imported into Covidence and screened (after de-duplication) independently by two reviewers, using explicit inclusion/exclusion criteria. We will conduct risk of bias and quality assessment using recommended tools and we will extract data using a pre-piloted, standardised data extraction form. If meta-synthesis cannot be conducted for the effectiveness component, we will carry out a descriptive narrative synthesis of the quantitative evidence, categorised by type of intervention, type of outcome/s, population characteristics and/or policy sector. The qualitative studies will be synthesised using thematic content analysis (Thomas and Harden 2008). If possible, we will also analyse the available economic data to understand the costs and benefits associated with SOC. Finally, we will conduct a cross-study synthesis, which will involve bringing together the findings from the effectiveness review, economic review and qualitative review. We recognise that the proposed conventional effectiveness review method may lead to inconclusive or partial findings given the complexity of the intervention, the likely degree of heterogeneity and the under-developed evidence base. We see a traditional systematic review as an important foundation to describe the evidence landscape. We will use this formal review as a starting point and then explore more contextually rooted review work in future. Discussion: We will use the systematic review findings to produce accessible and reliable empirical insights on whether, when, and where (and if possible, how) SOC approaches deliver improved impact when compared to more conventional funding arrangements. The outputs will support policymakers to make informed decisions in relation to commissioning and funding approaches. Systematic   review   registration: This   systematic review was registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO), on 20th November 2020 and was last updated on 21 January 2021: (registration number PROSPERO CRD42020215207). [1] A perverse incentive in an outcomes-based contract is an incentive that has unintended and undesirable results. For instance, a poorly designed welfare-to-work scheme could create incentives for service providers to prioritise clients who are easier to help and to ‘park’ those who are harder to assist (NAO 2015).
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社会计划和公共服务中的社会成果契约(SOC):一个混合方法系统审查方案
背景:在一系列政策领域和地区,政府和慈善家越来越希望采用社会成果承包(SOC)方法。在这种模式下,达成了一项协议,即服务提供商必须取得具体、可衡量的社会和/或环境成果,只有在取得这些成果后才能付款。尽管人们越来越感兴趣,但目前缺乏与实施这些方法相关的成果的切实改善有关的证据。尽管前景看好,但有证据表明存在风险(尤其是在管理不当激励方面)。[1] 随着对SOC的兴趣不断增长,对特定计划、政策领域或地理位置的研究也随之而来,但还没有系统地尝试综合这一新出现的证据。为了解决这一差距,本系统综述旨在找出与SOC相关的影响何时何地的最佳证据。方法:本混合方法系统综述方案是使用系统综述和荟萃分析方案(PRISMA-P)指南(附加文件2)编制的(Shamseer等人,2010)。该审查旨在通过采用用户参与的研究过程,在整个证据综合过程中咨询决策者。这将包括建立和参与一个政策咨询小组。PAG将由一个大型、多元化的国际决策者小组组成,他们正在或已经积极参与资助和制定社会成果合同(补充文件3)。将搜索以下电子数据库:ABI/INFORM Global、应用社会科学索引和摘要(ASSIA)、Scopus、国际社会科学参考书目(IBSS)、PAIS索引、PolicyFile索引、Proquest论文和论文、Proquest社会科学、社会服务摘要、科学网、全球政治科学摘要和PsycINFO。我们还将对灰色文献来源进行全面搜索。研究将导入Covidence,并由两名评审员使用明确的纳入/排除标准进行独立筛选(重复数据消除后)。我们将使用推荐的工具进行偏见风险和质量评估,并使用预先试点的标准化数据提取表提取数据。如果不能对有效性部分进行元综合,我们将对定量证据进行描述性叙述性综合,按干预类型、结果类型进行分类,人口特征和/或政策部门。定性研究将使用主题内容分析进行综合(Thomas和Harden,2008年)。如果可能,我们还将分析可用的经济数据,以了解SOC相关的成本和收益。最后,我们将进行交叉研究综合,包括将有效性审查、经济审查和定性审查的结果汇总在一起。我们认识到,鉴于干预的复杂性、可能的异质性程度和证据基础不足,拟议的传统有效性审查方法可能会导致不确定或部分结果。我们将传统的系统综述视为描述证据景观的重要基础。我们将以这次正式审查为起点,然后在未来探索更多基于背景的审查工作。讨论:我们将使用系统的审查结果来生成可访问的 并且可靠 关于 与更传统的融资安排相比,SOC方法是否、何时、何地(如果可能,如何)产生更好的影响。产出将支持决策者就委托和供资方法做出知情决定。系统综述注册:该系统综述于2020年11月20日在国际前瞻性系统综述注册中心(PROSPERO)注册,最后一次更新于2021年1月21日:(注册号PROSPERO CRD42020215207)。[1] 基于结果的合同中的不正当激励是指产生意外和不良结果的激励。例如,设计拙劣的工作福利计划可能会激励服务提供商优先考虑更容易帮助的客户,并“停放”更难帮助的客户(NAO 2015)。
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