Literature DB >> 12973646

Fees-for-services, cost recovery, and equity in a district of Burkina Faso operating the Bamako Initiative.

Valéry Ridde1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To gauge the effects of operating the Bamako Initiative in Kongoussi district, Burkina Faso.
METHODS: Qualitative and quasi-experimental quantitative methodologies were used.
FINDINGS: Following the introduction of fees-for-services in July 1997, the number of consultations for curative care fell over a period of three years by an average of 15.4% at "case" health centres but increased by 30.5% at "control" health centres. Moreover, although the operational results for essential drugs depots were not known, expenditure increased on average 2.7 times more than income and did not keep pace with the decline in the utilization of services. Persons in charge of the management committees had difficulties in releasing funds to ensure access to care for the poor.
CONCLUSION: The introduction of fees-for-services had an adverse effect on service utilization. The study district is in a position to bear the financial cost of taking care of the poor and the community is able to identify such people. Incentives must be introduced by the state and be swiftly applied so that the communities agree to a more equitable system and thereby allow access to care for those excluded from services because they are unable to pay.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12973646      PMCID: PMC2572499     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull World Health Organ        ISSN: 0042-9686            Impact factor:   9.408


  26 in total

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5.  Low coverage but few inclusion errors in Burkina Faso: a community-based targeting approach to exempt the indigent from user fees.

Authors:  Valéry Ridde; Slim Haddad; Béatrice Nikiema; Moctar Ouedraogo; Yamba Kafando; Abel Bicaba
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6.  [Women's health and the cooperation of Canadian voluntary medical relief workers in Afghanistan].

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7.  Challenges of scaling up and of knowledge transfer in an action research project in Burkina Faso to exempt the worst-off from health care user fees.

Authors:  Valéry Ridde; Maurice Yaogo; Yamba Kafando; Kadidiatou Kadio; Moctar Ouedraogo; Marou Sanfo; Norbert Coulibaly; Abel Bicaba; Slim Haddad
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8.  Operational issues and trends associated with the pilot introduction of zinc for childhood diarrhoea in Bougouni district, Mali.

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