"background": "Public health surveillance systems are critical for disease control and health policy in Tanzania. Evaluating their efficiency gains is essential for resource allocation, yet there is a lack of systematic analysis of the methodological rigour applied in such assessments within the national context. ", "purpose and objectives": "This systematic review aims to critically appraise the methodological approaches used to evaluate public health surveillance systems in Tanzania, with a specific focus on the application and reporting of the difference-in-differences model for measuring efficiency gains. ", "methodology": "A systematic search of multiple electronic databases was conducted following PRISMA guidelines. Studies were screened and selected based on pre-defined inclusion criteria focusing on evaluation methodologies. Data were extracted on study design, analytical methods, and reported outcomes, with a particular focus on the specification of the difference-in-differences model, Y{it = \0 + \1 + \2 + \ (\) + \₈ₓ, and the reporting of inference statistics. ", "findings": "Of the studies employing quasi-experimental designs, fewer than 30% adequately reported the parallel trends assumption or robust standard errors necessary for causal inference. A dominant theme was the conflation of descriptive performance assessments with rigorous impact evaluation. The most robust applications demonstrated efficiency gains, such as a reduction in reporting latency, but often lacked clarity on the counterfactual. ", "conclusion": "The methodological rigour of evaluations for public health surveillance systems in Tanzania is highly variable. While the difference-in-differences framework is recognised, its application is frequently incomplete, limiting the validity of stated efficiency gains. ", "recommendations": "Future evaluations should adopt a more stringent protocol for quasi-experimental designs, including pre-analysis plans and explicit testing of key model assumptions. Capacity building in advanced impact evaluation methodology is urgently needed for local researchers and public health practitioners. ", "key words": "
Rashid et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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