Technical efficiency of public district hospitals and health centres in Ghana: a pilot study

Author:

Osei Daniel,d'Almeida Selassi,George Melvill O,Kirigia Joses M,Mensah Ayayi Omar,Kainyu Lenity H

Abstract

Abstract Background The Government of Ghana has been implementing various health sector reforms (e.g. user fees in public health facilities, decentralization, sector-wide approaches to donor coordination) in a bid to improve efficiency in health care. However, to date, except for the pilot study reported in this paper, no attempt has been made to make an estimate of the efficiency of hospitals and/or health centres in Ghana. The objectives of this study, based on data collected in 2000, were: (i) to estimate the relative technical efficiency (TE) and scale efficiency (SE) of a sample of public hospitals and health centres in Ghana; and (ii) to demonstrate policy implications for health sector policy-makers. Methods The Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) approach was used to estimate the efficiency of 17 district hospitals and 17 health centres. This was an exploratory study. Results Eight (47%) hospitals were technically inefficient, with an average TE score of 61% and a standard deviation (STD) of 12%. Ten (59%) hospitals were scale inefficient, manifesting an average SE of 81% (STD = 25%). Out of the 17 health centres, 3 (18%) were technically inefficient, with a mean TE score of 49% (STD = 27%). Eight health centres (47%) were scale inefficient, with an average SE score of 84% (STD = 16%). Conclusion This pilot study demonstrated to policy-makers the versatility of DEA in measuring inefficiencies among individual facilities and inputs. There is a need for the Planning and Budgeting Unit of the Ghana Health Services to continually monitor the productivity growth, allocative efficiency and technical efficiency of all its health facilities (hospitals and health centres) in the course of the implementation of health sector reforms.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy

Reference44 articles.

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2. Republic of Ghana, Ministry of Health: Medium-term health strategy towards Vision 2020. Accra. 1999.

3. Republic of Ghana, Ministry of Health: Health sector 5-year programme of work 1997–2001. Accra. 1999.

4. Republic of Ghana, Ministry of Health: Health sector 5-year programme of work 2002–2006. Accra. 2001.

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