The impact of performance‐based financing within local health systems: Evidence from Mozambique

Author:

Anselmi Laura1ORCID,Ohrnberger Julius2ORCID,Fichera Eleonora3ORCID,Nhassengo Pedroso4,Fernandes Quinhas F.56,Chicumbe Sergio4

Affiliation:

1. Division of Population Health Health Services Research & Primary Care University of Manchester Manchester UK

2. School of Public Health MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis Imperial College London London UK

3. Department of Economics University of Bath Bath UK

4. Instituto Nacional de Saúde Maputo Mozambique

5. Department of Global Health University of Washington Washington Seattle USA

6. Direção Nacional de Saúde Publica, Ministério da Saúde Maputo Mozambique

Abstract

AbstractMost evidence on Performance Based Financing (PBF) in low‐income settings has focused on services delivered by providers in targeted health administrations, with limited understanding of how effects on health and care vary within them. We evaluated the population effects of a program implemented in two provinces in Mozambique, focusing on child, maternal and HIV/AIDS care and knowledge. We used a difference‐in‐difference estimation strategy applied to data on mothers from the Demographic Health Surveys, linked to information on their closest health facility. The impact of PBF was limited. HIV testing during antenatal care increased, particularly for women who were wealthier, more educated, or residing in Gaza Province. Knowledge about transmission of HIV from mother‐to‐child, and its prevention, increased, particularly for women who were less wealthy, less educated, or residing in Nampula Province. Exploiting the roll‐out by facility, we found that the effects were concentrated on less wealthy and less educated women, whose closest facility was in the referral network of a PBF facility. Results suggest that HIV testing and knowledge promotion increased in the whole district, as a strategy to boost referral for highly incentivized HIV services delivered in PBF facilities. However, demand‐side constraints may prevent the use of those services.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Policy

Reference65 articles.

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2. Anselmi L.(2017).Relatório de mapeamento de recursos do sector da saúde no âmbito do apoio do mecanismo de financiamento global (Global Financing Facility ‐ GFF) para todas as mulheres e todas as crianças Anexo II ao Caso de Investimento. Retrieved fromhttps://www.globalfinancingfacility.org/sites/gff_new/files/documents/Mozambique‐IC‐Annexes‐PR.pdf

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