| Literature DB >> 26022699 |
Augustina Koduah1,2, Han van Dijk3, Irene Akua Agyepong4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Development of health policy is a complex process that does not necessarily follow a particular format and a predictable trajectory. Therefore, agenda setting and selecting of alternatives are critical processes of policy development and can give insights into how and why policies are made. Understanding why some policy issues remain and are maintained whiles others drop off the agenda is an important enquiry. This paper aims to advance understanding of health policy agenda setting and formulation in Ghana, a lower middle-income country, by exploring how and why the maternal (antenatal, delivery and postnatal) fee exemption policy agenda in the health sector has been maintained over the four and half decades since a 'free antenatal care in government facilities' policy was first introduced in October 1963.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26022699 PMCID: PMC4450986 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-015-0016-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Historical timelines and mapping of maternal fee exemption policies in Ghana
| Year | Policy instrument | Policy content |
|---|---|---|
| 1963 | Letter | ‘The Minister has directed that with immediate effect all antenatal services provided at Government hospitals should be for free’ |
| 1969 | Hospital Fees Decree. National Liberation Council Decree, 360 | ‘Except in respect of accommodation and maintenance fees specified in the Second Schedule to this Decree and subject to any other provision of this Decree, no fees shall be paid in a hospital by |
| - (b) any persons in respect of antenatal care at a Clinic or Health Centre; | ||
| - (c) any multiparous patient with a history of five or more pregnancies, or any patient referred to a maternity or other hospital from a clinic or health centre or any patient referred to any such hospital by a registered midwife or registered medical practitioner’ | ||
| 1971 | Hospital Fees Act, 387 | ‘No fees other than the fees prescribed for accommodation and maintenance shall be paid in respect of services rendered in a hospital to |
| - (b) any person other than a non-resident alien in respect of antenatal care at a health post, rural health centre or clinic, or any other hospital specified by the Director of Medical Services by notice published in the Gazette; | ||
| - (c) any maternity patient who has had four or more child births; | ||
| - (d) any maternity patient referred to a hospital from a clinic or health centre; | ||
| - (e) any maternity patient referred to a hospital by a registered midwife or registered medical practitioner’ | ||
| 1983 | Hospital Fees Regulation. Legislative Instrument 1277 | ‘No fees other than hospital accommodations and catering services shall be paid in any Government hospital or clinic in respect of |
| – (i) antenatal and post-natal services | ||
| 1985 | Hospital Fees Regulation. Legislative Instrument 1313 | ‘No fees other than hospital accommodations and catering services shall be paid in any Government hospital or clinic in respect of |
| – (i) antenatal and post-natal services | ||
| 1997 | November 1997 Ministry of Health Guidelines | ‘Exemption for antenatal service (first 4 antenatal care visits) in government health facilities’ |
| 2003 | Annual Programme of Work, 2004 | ‘User fee exemption for maternal service in Northern, Upper-West, Upper-East and Central Regions in government, private and mission health facilities’ |
| 2005 | Annual Programme of Work, 2005. | ‘User fee exemption for maternal service in all ten regions in government, private and mission health facilities’ |
| 2008 | June 2008. Ministry of Health guidelines | ‘National Health Insurance Scheme premium exemption for all pregnant women in Ghana’ |
Summary of policy actors, contextual situations, accompanying power sources, and policy outcomes
| Agenda setting events | Precipitating factors | Actors, forces, context, evidence, narratives and interest favouring exemptions | Actors, forces, context, evidence, narratives, and interest opposing exemptions | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1963 | Political Socialist Ideology | Actors: | Actors: | |
| President-Dr Kwame Nkrumah | Ministry of Health (MOH) bureaucrats | Free antenatal service and minimal fees for other health services | ||
| Forces: | Forces: | |||
| Political power of government | Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | |||
| Political ideology at odds with charging fees for social services | ||||
| Context: | ||||
| Context: | MOH adjusting to the ‘new’ health sector administrative procedures post-independence | |||
| Euphoria after independence | ||||
| Evidence: | Evidence: | |||
| Charging fees for health service was at odds with socialist ideology | None | |||
| Narrative: | ||||
| Narrative: | Piecemeal effort to make free health for all practical | |||
| Government to provide free health care services for all | Interest: | |||
| Interest: | Provide health care services | |||
| Political gains and command of public attention | ||||
| 1969 | Change in government | Actors: | Actors: | |
| 1. MOH Bureaucrats | Head of State – Major General Joseph Arthur Ankrah | Maternal user fee exemption policy of free antenatal services expanded to include free delivery service for multiparous patient | ||
| 2. General Public | Forces: | |||
| 3. Head of State – Major General Joseph Arthur Ankrah | Political power of the government | |||
| Forces: | Government took the evidence of health sector budget deficit | |||
| 1. Health care service expertise and administrative | Context: | |||
| power of MOH | Deteriorating economy and growing health expenditure | |||
| 2. Power of voice and numbers of the general public | Evidence: | Increased fees for other health services stipulated in the Hospital Fees Decree, 360 | ||
| Health sector budget deficit | ||||
| 3. Political interest of military government to consolidate power overtook evidence of health sector budget deficit | Narrative: | |||
| Reintroduce hospital fee to generate health sector revenue | ||||
| Interest | ||||
| Context: | Generate health sector revenue to correct budget deficit | |||
| Existing free antenatal policy and minimal fees for other health services. | ||||
| High maternal health related deaths | ||||
| New military government | ||||
| Evidence: | ||||
| Popular hospital fees exemption policies and minimal fees for other health services | ||||
| Narrative: | ||||
| Go on with maternal user fee exemption policy | ||||
| Interest: | ||||
| MOH – provide health care services | ||||
| General public – go on with maternal user fee exemption and minimal fees for other health services | ||||
| 1971 | Change in government | Actors: | Actors: | Existing maternal user fee exemption policy maintained. The intent to increase minimal fees for other health services stipulated in the Hospital Fees Act, 387 |
| 1. Prime Minister – Dr Kofi Abrefa Busia | 1. MOH Bureaucrats | |||
| 2. General Public | 2. Konotey-Ahulu committee | |||
| Forces: | Forces: | |||
| 1. Political power of government | 1. Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | |||
| 2. Power of voice and numbers of the general public | 2. Technical expertise of the Committee | |||
| Context: | Context: | |||
| Existing free antenatal policy and minimal fees for other health services. | Deteriorating economy and growing health expenditure | |||
| Evidence: | ||||
| Public outcry about hospital fees | Health sector budget deficit | |||
| New democratic government | Narrative: | |||
| Evidence: | MOH – Free health service is not the way to go | |||
| Popular maternal user fee exemption policy. | Konotey-Ahulu committee – There could be no health service without fees | |||
| Narrative: | Interest | |||
| Prime Minister – Go on with exemptions and minimal hospital fees awaiting Konotey-Ahulu’s recommendations | Generate health sector revenue to correct budget deficit | |||
| General Public – No increase in hospital fees for health services and maintain ongoing maternal user fee exemption | ||||
| Interest: | ||||
| Prime Minister – Consolidate political power and maintain the status quo | ||||
| General Public – Go on with maternal user fee exemption and minimal fees for other health services | ||||
| 1983 | Under resourced public health services | Actors: | Actors: | Existing maternal user fee exemptions policy narrowed to antenatal and postnatal services |
| 1. Military leader – Flight Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings | 1. MOH Bureaucrats | |||
| 2. Multilateral agency: United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) | 2. Health professional bodies – Ghana Medical Association, Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana | |||
| Forces: | Forces: | |||
| 1. Political power of government | 1. Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | |||
| Fees for other health services stipulated in the Hospital fees Regulation, 1277 | ||||
| 2. Medical expertise and financial power of UNICEF | 2. Expertise of professional bodies | |||
| Context: | 3. Evidence of shortage of medicines and consumables overtook political interest to keep the status quo | |||
| Context: | ||||
| Existing free antenatal policy and minimal fees for other health services | Economic crisis and severe health sector budget deficit | |||
| Evidence: | ||||
| Evidence: | Shortage of medicines and consumables | |||
| Strong political interest and support of government to keep the status quo | ||||
| Narrative: | Narrative: | |||
| Go on with maternal user fee exemptions and minimal hospital fee for other health services | Charge hospital fees to generate health sector revenue | |||
| Interest: | Interest: | |||
| Military leader – Not to distress the general populace with hospital fees during economic crisis | Reintroduce hospital fee for all health services to correct health budget deficit | |||
| UNICEF – Advocate for free maternal health services | ||||
| 1985 | Under resourced public health services | Actors: | None opposing | Maternal (antenatal and postnatal) user fee exemption policy maintained |
| 1. Military leader – Flight Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings | ||||
| 2. MOH Bureaucrats | ||||
| Forces: | ||||
| 1. Political power of government | ||||
| 2. Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | ||||
| Increased fees for other health services stipulated in the Hospital fees Regulation, 1313 | ||||
| Context: | ||||
| Economic crisis | ||||
| Structural Adjustment Programme | ||||
| Existing free antenatal and postnatal services | ||||
| Evidence: | ||||
| Charged hospital fees could not recover full cost | ||||
| Some health facilities already increased hospital fees to recover cost | ||||
| Narrative: | ||||
| Increase hospital fees to recover cost and maintain maternal | ||||
| user fee exemption | ||||
| Interest: | ||||
| Generate health sector revenue and go on with maternal user fee exemptions policy | ||||
| 1997 | Worsening national maternal health indicators | Actors: | Actors: | Existing maternal user fee exemption policy narrowed to four antenatal visits |
| President – Flight Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings | MOH Bureaucrats | |||
| Forces: | Forces: | |||
| Political power of government | Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | |||
| Context: | Evidence of health sector budget deficit overtook government intent | |||
| Health sector full cost recovery under structural adjustment programme | ||||
| Context: | ||||
| Declining maternal health outcomes | Low health sector budget allocation | |||
| Evidence: | Evidence: | |||
| Low maternal supervised delivery in health facilities of 44 % as stated in the Ghana Demographic Health Survey [ | Health sector budget deficit | |||
| High maternal mortality rate estimate of 214 per 100,000a live births as stated in the Ghana Maternal Health Survey [ | Narrative: | |||
| MOH cannot implement fully maternal user fee exemption policy as per the directive | ||||
| Narrative: | ||||
| Interest | ||||
| Pregnant women are not accessing supervised delivery services in health facilities because of inability to pay | Ensure health service delivery | |||
| Interest: | ||||
| Government intends to mitigate social consequence of the structural adjustment programme | ||||
| 2003 | Ghana poverty reduction strategy and Heavily Indebted Poor Countries grant | Actors: | None opposing | Maternal user fee exemption policy linked to poverty reduction strategy priorities |
| 1. President: John Agyekum Kufuor | ||||
| 2. Multilateral agency: World Bank group and International Monetary Fund | ||||
| 3. MOH Bureaucrats | ||||
| Forces: | Maternal user fee exemption policy expanded to include delivery and postnatal services and narrowed to four deprived regions | |||
| 1. Political power of government | ||||
| 2. Financial power of World Bank and International Monetary Bank | ||||
| 3. Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | ||||
| Context: | ||||
| Stagnant economic growth | ||||
| Inequitable national poverty levels | ||||
| New democratic government | ||||
| Evidence: | ||||
| Worsening poverty indicators such as maternal mortality rate | ||||
| Narrative: | ||||
| There exist a positive correlation between poverty and health outcomes | ||||
| Interest: | ||||
| Improve poverty related health indicators | ||||
| 2005 | Worsening national maternal health indicators | Actors: | None opposing | Maternal user fee exemption policy linked to poverty reduction strategy priorities |
| 1. Minister of Health: Major Courage Quashigah | ||||
| 2. Multilateral and bilateral agencies – health sector signatories to 2005 Aide Memoire (European Commission, Royal Danish Embassy, Royal Netherlands Embassy/Department for International Development*, United Nations Population Fund, UNICEF, USAID, Japan International Cooperation Agency, WHO and World Bank) | ||||
| Maternal (antenatal, delivery and postnatal) user fee exemption policy expanded to all regions | ||||
| 3. MOH Bureaucrats | ||||
| Forces: | ||||
| 1. Political and administrative power of the Minister | ||||
| 2. Technical expertise and financial power of the Donors | ||||
| 3. Health care service expertise, administrative power of MOH | ||||
| Context: | ||||
| National poverty reduction strategy | ||||
| Election year | ||||
| High poverty in non-deprived regions | ||||
| Evidence: | ||||
| High national maternal mortality rate of 503 per 100,000b live birth as stated in the Ghana Millennium Development Goal Acceleration Framework and Country Action Plan [ | ||||
| Narrative: | ||||
| Poverty and poor maternal health outcome exist in non-deprived regions | ||||
| Interest: | ||||
| Improve national maternal health indicators | ||||
| 2008 | Maternal health declared a national emergency | Actors: | None opposing | Free maternal (antenatal, delivery and postnatal) care directive |
| 1. President – John Agyekum Kufuor | ||||
| 2. Minister of Health – Major Courage Quashigah | ||||
| 3. MOH Bureaucrats | ||||
| Forces: | ||||
| 1. Political power of the government | ||||
| 2. Political and administrative power of the Minister | ||||
| 3. Health care service expertise and administrative power of MOH | ||||
| Context: | ||||
| Election year | ||||
| Suspended maternal user fee exemption policy | ||||
| Evidence: | ||||
| Routine health management information system data from the independent review of the 2007 Programme of Work shows: | ||||
| (a) Increased institutional maternal mortality ratio of 187/100,000 live births in 2006 to 224/100,000 live births in 2007 | ||||
| (b) Decreased proportion of maternal supervised deliveries in healthcare facilities from 44.5 % in 2006 to 35.1 % in 2007 | ||||
| Narrative: | ||||
| Suspended maternal user fee exemption policy contributed greatly to poor maternal health outcomes | ||||
| Interest: | ||||
| Improve maternal health indicators and consolidate political gains |
*The Royal Netherlands Embassy was in charge of Department for International Development health projects in Ghana, in line with the cost containment entered into between the two countries.