Review

Global Public–Private Partnerships in Primary Care: Navigating Equity Tradeoffs

Reframing Public-Private Partnerships in Primary Healthcare: An Equity Lens

Public–private partnerships (PPPs) have become a defining feature of the global health landscape, especially as governments seek to mobilize diverse resources to meet the ambitious goals of Universal Health Coverage (UHC). Their increasing incorporation into Primary Health Care (PHC) systems, particularly in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), represents a major departure from their historical roots in disease-specific vertical programs. This transition demands a more critical and nuanced appraisal of how PPPs interact with health equity imperatives. While PPPs may offer avenues for innovation, efficiency, accessibility, and expanded service delivery, they simultaneously risk worsening structural inequities, displacing public investment, and fragmenting care. This commentary explores the core equity trade-offs inherent in PPPs for primary care, highlighting gaps in current governance frameworks, the implications of market-driven approaches, and the need for equity-centred policy design.

Transitioning PPPs from Targeted to Systenmic Approaches
PPPs have delivered notable successes in global health, particularly through vertical programs targeting infectious diseases. Flagship initiatives like the Global Fund and Gavi exemplify how strategic alliances between public and private actors can marshal resources and deliver life-saving interventions at scale [1]. However, the horizontal integration of PPPs into PHC, a foundational component of health systems, poses complex challenges. Unlike vertical programs, PHC involves continuous, comprehensive, and community-embedded care. Its delivery is inherently relational and place-based, making it less amenable to commodified or standardized interventions.

The World Health Organization (WHO) acknowledges the potential role of PPPs in achieving Sustainable Development Goal 3, particularly concerning UHC and essential service coverage [2]. Yet, policy frameworks often lack sufficient operational guidance on aligning PPPs with public values such as equity, accountability, and universality. The pivot toward PPPs in PHC, absent clear safeguards, risks importing market logic in a domain where equity must remain paramount.

Empirical evidence from LMICs illustrates how PPPs, if not carefully regulated, can entrench or widen health disparities. Kenya’s Managed Equipment Services (MES) program, designed to modernize diagnostic infrastructure, demonstrates the uneven benefits of PPPs. While well-equipped facilities were established in some counties, poorer regions struggled with recurrent costs and could not maintain equipment, resulting in widened service gaps [3]. Similarly, in India, PPPs in diagnostic services lowered out-of-pocket costs for some urban residents but failed to reach rural populations, reflecting an urban bias and insufficient public oversight [4].

These cases underscore a recurrent theme: PPPs are often structured in ways that favour profit-maximizing behaviours, with private actors naturally drawn to lucrative services or densely populated areas. Hellowell and Pollock [5] argue that this dynamic introduces systematic inequities in service distribution. Moreover, where user fees are introduced either directly or through associated costs such as transportation or digital access, the poorest populations face disproportionate barriers to care [6].

Allocative Equity and Budgetary Risks in PPPs
Equity trade-offs are further complicated when PPPs consume a disproportionate share of health budgets. The Lesotho example is particularly instructive. There, a PPP model delivered a high-quality national referral hospital, yet the project absorbed nearly half the national health budget, thereby constraining investment in rural and preventive services [7]. This case raises critical questions about allocative equity: Should we divert scarce public funds to high-cost, high-tech facilities at the expense of broad-based, community-level services?

Even well-intentioned PPPs can fall short without rigorous mechanisms for transparency, accountability, and public engagement. Nigeria’s Saving One Million Lives initiative, which leveraged private sector involvement in maternal and child health, lacked clear accountability structures and equity benchmarks. As a result, disparities in access and quality of care persisted [8]. These experiences highlight the limits of technocratic or efficiency-driven models in addressing the complex social determinants of health.

Digital Health Partnerships: Innovation without Inclusion?
The digital health frontier introduces a new set of equity considerations. While digital PPPs can increase access to consultations and triage services, as seen in Rwanda and Bangladesh, they can also reinforce existing digital divides [9, 10]. Marginalized populations often lack reliable internet access, digital literacy, or appropriate devices, effectively excluding them from emerging modes of care delivery. Additionally, algorithmic bias and data privacy concerns pose further risks to equity in digitally mediated care.

Stewardship and Regulation: Key Determinants of PPP Equity Outcomes
These developments call for robust governance frameworks that can anticipate and mitigate equity risks. Regulatory capacity is a decisive variable in determining whether PPPs serve public interest goals. Thailand offers a relatively successful model in this regard. There, the government has retained strong stewardship over financing and service provision, using private sector inputs in supportive roles rather than as system drivers [11]. In contrast, weak regulatory environments, as found in many fragile or conflict-affected states, enabled private actors to prioritize donor preferences or market returns over population health needs [12].

Equity by Design: Rethinking PPP Assumptions

A key gap in current discourse is the lack of systematic equity impact assessments embedded within PPP design and evaluation. International donors and development finance institutions, as the principal architects and funders of PPPs, have an ethical obligation to ensure that their investments do not exacerbate health inequities. This requires more than tokenistic stakeholder consultations or retrospective evaluations. Equity considerations must be front-loaded into contracting processes, performance metrics, and long-term sustainability plans. Transparent procurement, independent monitoring, and inclusive governance are essential safeguards.

Furthermore, the global health community must reckon with the implications of expanding PPPs in primary care. The assumption that private sector involvement inherently leads to improved outcomes must be problematized. Innovation and efficiency are not value-neutral; they are shaped by the institutional and political context in which PPPs operate. Without deliberate policy interventions, PPPs may contribute to the gradual privatization and fragmentation of PHC, weakening the role of the state as a guarantor of equitable access.

Conclusion: Reclaiming Equity in Primary Health PPPs To this end, the WHO’s framework on Integrated People-Centred Health Services (IPCHS) provides a useful starting point. It emphasizes inclusive governance, community engagement, and equity-driven service design [13]. However, it stops short of offering actionable guidance on how to operationalize these principles within PPP arrangements. Bridging this gap is an urgent task for policymakers, researchers, and advocates alike. Looking forward, the question is not whether to engage the private sector in primary care, but how to do so in a manner that safeguards equity. This entails rejecting binary framings of public versus private and instead focusing on governance arrangements that prioritize social objectives over commercial interests. Public financing, participatory oversight, and equitable allocation of resources must anchor all PPP initiatives. Without such commitments, PPPs risk becoming vehicles for commodification rather than conduits for solidarity. The path toward UHC and resilient PHC systems will be defined by how effectively equity is mainstreamed into public–private collaborations. Governments must reclaim their role as stewards of the public good, ensuring that PPPs do not displace public investment but instead reinforce the moral mandate of health for all. Equity, in this context, is not a passive outcome but a deliberate pursuit, requiring political will, institutional capacity, and normative clarity.

Ethical approval
Not applicable
Funding information
This research received no specific grants from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Declaration of Competing Interest
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
Acknowledgments
None.
Data Availability Statement
The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

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About the Author(s)

Emmanuel I. Ajanaku

Affiliation: Health Equity Accelerator Leadership Initiative, Ekiti State University, Ekiti State

ajanakuiyanuoluwa01@gmail.com

Taiwo Rukayat Onifade

Affiliation: Slum and Rural Health Initiative, Ibadan, Oyo State

Table 1: WHO Maturity Levels for Pharmaceutical Regulation

Key Recommendation Area Specific Actions/Strategies Rationale / Expected Impact on Equity Stakeholders
Prioritize Robust Governance Mandate full implementation of comprehensive frameworks like TAPIC (Transparency, Accountability, Participation, Integrity, Policy Capacity). Emphasize transparent communication, clear contracts, performance metrics, and genuine participation of all stakeholders, especially vulnerable communities. Strong governance directly mitigates the profit motive's negative impacts, builds trust, and ensures resources are allocated equitably, leading to services that truly meet community needs. Government, Policy advocates.
Strengthen Public Sector Capacity Invest significantly in building the public sector's capacity for PPP negotiation, contract management, monitoring, and evaluation in LMICs. Addresses the "capacity gap" that often leaves LMICs vulnerable to unfavorable PPP terms and ensures effective oversight, leading to better value for public funds and more equitable service delivery. Universities, National Governments, International Agencies
Context-Specific & Equity-Driven Design Tailor PPPs to specific local contexts, explicitly designing them with an equity lens from inception. Address the unique needs of rural, indigenous, refugee, and low-income populations, incorporating culturally sensitive approaches and patient navigation services. Ensures PPPs are not superficial fixes but address the unique barriers faced by marginalized groups, leading to targeted and effective improvements in access and outcomes. Government, Civil Society, International Donors
Align Values and Methods Proactively identify and reconcile potential misalignments between public health goals (e.g., prevention, comprehensive PHC) and private sector incentives (e.g., profit from high-cost services). Prioritize agreement on methods to achieve shared goals. Prevents PPPs from inadvertently distorting health priorities or increasing costs, ensuring that private sector engagement genuinely supports public health objectives rather than undermining them. World Bank, Gavi, Global Fund, Bilateral Donors