The effects of decentralized financing and funding levels on the breadth and quality of services provided in primary health facilities in Nigeria

Author:

Hagedorn Brittany1,Cooper Jeremy1,Loevinsohn Benjamin2,Martufi Valentina3

Affiliation:

1. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

2. Gavi The Vaccine Alliance

3. FIOCRUZ

Abstract

Abstract

Background To improve service delivery of Nigeria’s primary health care (PHC) system, the government tested two approaches for facility-level financing: performance-based financing (PBF) and decentralized facility financing (DFF). Facilities also had increased autonomy, supervision, and community oversight. We examine how the approach, funding level, and state context affected breadth of services and structural quality.Methods We use health facility surveys previously collected in 2014 and 2017, covering three years of implementation, in which districts were randomly assigned PBF or DFF and compared to matched districts in control states. We use log-linear regressions and non-parametric statistics to estimate the effect size of the financing approach and level of funding per capita.Results Service availability was highest in PBF facilities, while DFF also outperformed control on most measures. Results showed that structural readiness and service offerings both increased with more funding, especially under DFF. DFF and PBF facilities were better equipped to provide services that they claimed to offer, which was not the case for controls. Overall, PBF outperformed DFF, partially explained by funding levels. The rate of offering complimentary services followed a pattern of easiest-to-hardest to deliver.Conclusion PBF and DFF both improved the breadth and structural quality of services, although DFF performance was more sensitive to funding levels. Improvements were observed at relatively low levels of funding, but larger investments were associated with better performance. Most DFF facilities exceeded the performance of higher-funded controls, implying that funding was more valuable in the context of autonomy, increased supervision, and community oversight.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference32 articles.

1. Primary Health Care in Nigeria: 24 Years after Olikoye Ransome-Kuti’s Leadership;Aregbeshola BS;Front Public Health,2017

2. An Investigation of the Relationship Between the Performance and Management Practices of Health Facilities Under a Performance-Based Financing Scheme in Nigeria;Mabuchi S;Health Policy Plan,2022

3. 36 States And The FCT To Share $1.5m FG Fund For Primary Healthcare. Lagos (Nigeria): Information Nigeria; 2016 Jul 12 [accessed 2023 Jul 20]. https://www.informationng.com/2016/07/36-states-and-the-fct-to-share-1-5m-fg-fund-for-primary-healthcare.html.

4. Kandpal E, Loevinsohn B, Vermeersch C, Pradhan E, Khanna M, Conlon M, et al. Impact Evaluation of Nigeria State Health Investment Project. Washington (DC): The World Bank; 2018.

5. National Primary Health Care Development Agency. Federal Ministry of Health, Ondo Nasarawa and Adamawa State Ministries of Health. Nigeria State Health Investment Project (NSHIP) Performance-Based Financing User Manual. Abuja (Nigeria); 2013.

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