| Literature DB >> 17241454 |
Sophie Witter1, Anthony Kusi, Moses Aikins.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This article describes a survey of health workers and traditional birth attendants (TBAs) which was carried out in 2005 in two regions of Ghana. The objective of the survey was to ascertain the impact of the introduction of a delivery fee exemption scheme on both health workers and those providers who were excluded from the scheme (TBAs). This formed part of an overall evaluation of the delivery fee exemption scheme. The results shed light not only on the scheme itself but also on the general productivity of a range of health workers in Ghana.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17241454 PMCID: PMC1783666 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-5-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Research questions for health worker incentives survey, Ghana
| Type of impact | Hypotheses about how the delivery fee exemption policy might affect HWs and TBAs | Indicators and expected direction of change |
| Changes to income | 1. Main salary, allowances, per diems and benefits in kind not workload-related so should not change for public and mission staff. For private midwives, though, income is related to work, so will reflect demand for their services under the new policy. | Income from different sources collected to put other variable sources in perspective, but any change assumed to be unrelated to DFEP, except for private midwives. |
| 2. Private practice income might be reduced, if hours spent in public service increased, with increased demand. | Private practice hours, client numbers and income might decline, for public and mission HWs. | |
| 3. Incentive income related to the DFEP might redress any losses from other categories. | DFEP incentive payments monitored, for all groups other than TBAs. | |
| 4. Anecdotally, staff used to make pocket money from sales of items to women coming in for deliveries; this might be jeopardised by policy. | HWs asked about sales to patients. Reduction expected. | |
| Changes to working hours and work load | 5. Would expect policy to increase working hours and workload for all HWs, public and private, and to diminish them for TBAs, who excluded from the policy*. | Working hours for main job, number of clients seen, and number of deliveries performed are all expected to rise, except for TBAs, where expect a drop (at least relative drop, allowing for population growth). |
| Changes to general motivation | 6. Might expect working conditions to improve, if funding for scheme is sustained and drugs and supplies are easily acquired; or the reverse, if funding is inadequate. | Unclear direction, but indicators are answers to questions on HW views of the policy's impact (particularly in relation to drugs and supplies). |
| 7. Psychological benefits from knowing that all clients can access services and are not struggling to pay their bills. Staff no longer have to 'help' financially challenged women | HW views on the policy – expect positive reports on the overall impact of the scheme. | |
| 8. TBAs may be struggling and hostile to a policy which has negatively affected their business. Private midwives may also be disaffected if payments under the DFEP are less than they used to raise from user payments. | TBAs' and private midwives' views of the DFEP – expect negative reports from TBAs and ambivalent from private midwives. |
* According to national guidelines, TBAs were not included. However, in one district in Volta, the district opted to include them in the DFEP, providing small payments per women delivered.
Survey sample, by professional title and region
| Doctor | 12 | 9 | 21 |
| Medical assistant | 3 | 8 | 11 |
| Public midwife | 59 | 58 | 117 |
| Private midwife | 12 | 4 | 16 |
| Nurse | 17 | 22 | 39 |
| Community nurse | 10 | 1 | 11 |
| TBA (trained) | 66 | 42 | 108 |
| TBA (untrained) | 32 | 19 | 51 |
| Total | 211 | 163 | 374 |
Figure 1Mean daily workload per public midwife, by facility type.
Comparing results with predicted changes, health worker incentives survey, Ghana
| 1. Salary and allowances | Change in real terms of basic income (salary plus ADHA) over two years of: | General pay has risen for health workers. However, the fact that private midwifes have also increased their pay, while TBAs have seen a real decline, does suggest that the DFEP is affecting their incomes (positive for those groups included and negatively for the excluded groups). |
| 2. Private practice | Private practice income was almost non-existent (only 1% – two doctors – reported any). | Given how small these elements are, no impact can be expected from the DFEP. |
| 3. DFEP incentive payments | Exemption incentives were reported to have been received by only 11.6% of health workers. The public midwives reported the highest average payment of ¢245,000 per month. This incentive was mainly reported by respondents from the Central Region who constituted 93.5% of the recipients. | These incentives were not mandated nationally and therefore only affect regions which have decided to institute them. The figures for CR suggest that at nearly 19% of their basic salary, these incentives should have had a motivating effect on midwives. |
| 4. Sales to patients | Virtually no reports of additional income for health workers – only 3 midwives reported any. Not much change reported either (one had increase slightly; others no change). | Very few responses, therefore no impact noted either way. However, there may be under-reporting (usual for informal payments etc.). |
| 5. Working hours and client numbers | All groups record increase in working hours (21% for doctors; 22% for MAs; 27.5% for public midwives; 12% for nurses; 14% for CHNs), with exception of private midwives (who report a decrease of 5%) and TBAs (who report a decrease of 9% for trained and no change for untrained) | As population growth is in the region of 2.6% per annum, these large increases for public sector workers cannot simply be attributed to that. They suggest that the DFEP is increasing their workload. The picture is more complex for private midwives, who report and increase in clients and income, but a decrease in working hours and no change in deliveries. It may be that they are switching to other services or being paid more for the stable number of deliveries that they are performing. For TBAs the picture is clear: decline in income, working hours, clients and deliveries, which are likely to be attributable, at least in part, to the DFEP. |
| All groups record increase in clients per week (7% for doctors; 11% for MAs; 17% for midwives; 36% for private midwives; 9% for nurses; 14% for CHNs), with exception of TBAs (who report a decrease of 11% for trained and 14% for untrained TBAs) | ||
| All groups record increase in deliveries per week (27% for doctors; 33% for MAs; 36% for midwives; 27% for nurses and 11% for CHNs), with exception of private midwives (no change) and TBAs (decrease of a third for both types). | ||
| 6. Working conditions | 76% of respondents in CR and 59% in VR felt that drugs and supplies were adequate to deal with the increases in numbers. However, only 29% in CR and 19% in VR felt that staffing was adequate. | We do not know how satisfied staff were with supplies, staff numbers etc. before the policy – these factors were already constrained. However, it is clear that adequate staffing is their main concern in relation to the DFEP. |
| 7. Psychological benefits to staff | Asked about the impact of the policy on them personally, 61% report an increase in workload; 61% report an increase in income; 42% report no change in job satisfaction; and the responses to overall change in work situation is fairly equally divided between improve, worsen and no change. | These responses reflect the changes reported above – more work, higher incomes and an overall neutral effect on general satisfaction. |
| 8. TBAs' and private midwives' views | TBAs and private midwives were the only groups to report a decrease in their workload due to the DFEP. They and the mission sector report a decrease in income too, in open questions. | This correlates with findings above – negative impact on TBAs and ambivalent on private midwives. |
Pay and productivity for different health worker groups and TBAs in Ghana
| Doctor | 14,618 | 34% | 38.5 | 109.29 | 257.11 | 14 | 1.09 | 20 | 2.57 |
| Medical Assistant | 5,367 | 76% | 14.1 | 129.2 | 172.27 | 8 | 0.60 | 13 | 0.80 |
| GoG Midwife | 5,581 | 46% | 14.7 | 78.78 | 119 | 19 | 0.90 | 6 | 1.36 |
| Private Midwife | 2,974 | n/a | 7.8 | 111.69 | 38 | 4 | 1.51 | 14 | 0.51 |
| Nurse | 4,902 | 58% | 12.9 | 75.7 | 87.51 | 14 | 1.08 | 7 | 1.25 |
| Community Nurse | 3,606 | 47% | 9.5 | 56.09 | 102.5 | 10 | 0.68 | 7 | 1.24 |
| TBA (trained) | 141 | n/a | 0.4 | 21.3 | 8.2 | 2 | 0.33 | 1 | 0.13 |
| TBAs (untrained) | 104 | n/a | 0.3 | 19.19 | 5.87 | 2 | 0.34 | 1 | 0.10 |