| Literature DB >> 30244685 |
Anne-Marie Turcotte-Tremblay1,2, Manuela De Allegri3, Idriss Ali Gali-Gali4,5, Valéry Ridde6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: User fees and poor quality of care contribute to low use of healthcare services in Burkina Faso. The government implemented an innovative intervention that combines equity measures with performance-based financing (PBF). These health equity measures included a community-based selection of indigents to receive user fee exemptions and paying healthcare centres higher purchase prices for services provided to indigents. Research suggests complex interventions can trigger changes not targeted by program planners. To date, however, there is a knowledge gap regarding the unintended consequences that can emerge from combining PBF with health equity measures. Our objective is to document unintended consequences of the equity measures in this complex intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Burkina Faso; Indigents; Multiple-case study; Performance-based financing; Unintended consequences; Universal health coverage; User fee exemption
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30244685 PMCID: PMC6151907 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-018-0780-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1Conceptual model
Description of four cases
| Descriptors | Facility 1 | Facility 2 | Facility 3 | Facility 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| PBF3 | PBF3 | PBF1 | PBF1 |
|
| Low | High | Low | High |
|
| CSPS, public, not-for-profit | CSPS, public, not-for-profit | CSPS, public, not-for-profit | CSPS, public, not-for-profit |
|
| 1 head nurse | 1 head nurse | 1 head nurse | 1 head nurse |
| 2 itinerant health workers* (IHW) | 1 IHW | 1 nurse | 1 IHW | |
| 1 auxiliary midwife | 2 IHWs | 1 auxiliary midwife | ||
| 1 auxiliary midwife | 1 midwife | 4 trainees (temporary) | ||
| 1 IHW volunteer | 1 auxiliary midwife | |||
| 3 trainees (temporary) | ||||
|
| 1 drug depot manager | 1 drug depot manager | 1 drug depot manager | 1 drug depot manager |
| 1 guard | 1 guard | 1 guard | 1 guard | |
| 1 janitor | 1 janitor | 1 janitor | 2 janitors | |
|
| 5 | 8 | 22 | 6 |
|
| ~ 8000 | ~ 3600 | ~ 11,000 | ~ 3700 |
|
| No | No | Yes | Yes |
|
| Dagara | Lobi | Lobi | Birifor, Djan |
|
| 829 (10.4%) | 566 (15.7%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
|
| Agriculture | Agriculture | Agriculture | Agriculture |
| Livestock farming | Livestock farming | Livestock farming | Livestock farming | |
| Production of local alcohol | Production of local alcohol | Production of local alcohol | Production of local alcohol | |
|
| Gardening during dry period | High migration rate | High migration rate |
*Itinerant health workers are employees in charge of promoting health, hygiene, and vaccination, notably through household visits and community gatherings. In practice, they also deliver healthcare services due to the shortage of healthcare workers
Summary of data collected
| Quantity | |
|---|---|
| Non-participant observation | |
| Sessions reported in field notes | 241 |
| Interviews | |
| At facility level | |
| Healthcare providers | 15 |
| Other support staff (drug depot manager, janitor, security guard) | 13 |
| Volunteers & trainees | 7 |
| Community leaders (e.g., COGES, selection committees & community health workers) | 23 |
| Service users (e.g. patients, indigents) | 18 |
| At district level | |
| Administrative staff (e.g. manager, accountant, data collection agent/photographer) | 4 |
| Members of contractualization and verification agency | 4 |
| Members of local association conducting community verifications | 7 |
| At national level | |
| Representative from the | 1 |
| Representative from the | 1 |
| Total semi-structured interviews | 93 |
Classification of unintended consequences
Additional file 4 specifies how the anticipated consequences were explicitly addressed in the intervention guides
Fig. 2Facility 1 - Total number of new consultations for patients classified as indigents or non-indigents seen in curative care.
Note: As shown by the qualitative data, the curves representing non-indigents are likely to include individuals who should have received user fee exemptions but were requested to pay, either because they did not possess an indigent card or because healthcare workers refused to recognize their indigent status. Similarly, the curves representing indigents may include individuals who received indigent cards even though they did not truly meet the local conceptualization of indigents
Fig. 3Facility 2 - Total number of new consultations for patients classified as indigents or non-indigents seen in curative care
Fig. 4Average number of new consultations for patients classified as indigents or non-indigents seen in curative care in PBF3 facilities (n = 7) within the study district.
Note: Healthcare centres (n = 7) for which the intervention arm was not specified in the database were excluded. PBF ceased to fund services delivered to indigent children under five once the free healthcare policy began in June 2016 because it covered their user fees and medications