The nature, drivers and equity consequences of informal payments for maternal and child health care in primary health centres in Enugu, Nigeria

Author:

Ogbozor Pamela Adaobi12ORCID,Hutchinson Eleanor3ORCID,Goodman Catherine3ORCID,McKee Martin3ORCID,Onwujekwe Obinna24ORCID,Balabanova Dina3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Enugu State University of Science and Technology , PMB 01600, Agbani, Enugu, Nigeria

2. Health Policy Research Group, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus , PMB 01129, Enugu, Nigeria

3. Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine , 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, United Kingdom

4. Department of Health Administration and Management, University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus , PMB 410001, Enugu, Nigeria

Abstract

Abstract In Nigeria, most basic maternal and child health services in public primary health-care facilities should be either free of charge or subsidized. In practice, additional informal payments made in cash or in kind are common. We examined the nature, drivers and equity consequences of informal payments in primary health centres (PHC) in Enugu State. We used three interlinked qualitative methods: participant observation in six PHC facilities and two local government area (LGA) headquarters; in-depth interviews with frontline health workers (n = 19), managers (n = 4) and policy makers (n = 10); and focus group discussions (n = 2) with female service users. Data were analysed thematically using NVivo 12. Across all groups, informal payments were described as routine for immunization, deliveries, family planning consultations and birth certificate registration. Health workers, managers and policy makers identified limited supervision, insufficient financing of facilities, and lack of receipts for formal payments as enabling this practice. Informal payments were seen by managers and health workers as a mechanism to generate discretionary revenue to cover operational costs of the facility but, in practice, were frequently taken as extra income by health workers. Health workers rationalized informal payments as being of small value, and not a burden to users. However, informal payments were reported to be inequitable and exclusionary. Although they tended to be lower in rural PHCs than in wealthier urban facilities, participant observation revealed how, within a PHC, the lowest earners paid the same as others and were often left unattended if they failed to pay. Some female patients reported that extra payments excluded them from services, driving them to seek help from retail outlets or unlicensed health providers. As a result, informal payments reduced equity of access to essential services. Targeted policies are needed to improve financial risk protection for the poorest groups and address drivers of informal payments and unfairness in the health system.

Funder

UK Department for International Development, the UK Medical Research Council and Wellcome with support from the UK Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy

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