| Literature DB >> 30379907 |
Luis Huicho1,2,3, Carlos A Huayanay-Espinoza1,2, Patricia Hernandez4, Jessica Niño de Guzman5, Maria Rivera-Ch1.
Abstract
We compared expenditure trends for reproductive, maternal, neonatal and child health (RMNCH) with trends in RMNCH service coverage in Peru. We used National Health Accounts data to report on total health expenditure by source; the Countdown database for trends in external funding to RMNCH, and Ministry of Finance data for trends in domestic funding to RMNCH. We undertook over 170 interviews and group discussions to explore factors explaining expenditure trends. We describe trends in total health expenditure and RMNCH expenditure in constant 2012 US$ between 1995 and 2012. We estimated expenditure to coverage ratios. There was a substantial increase in domestic health expenditure over the period. However, domestic health expenditure as share of total government spending and GDP remained stable. Out-of-pocket health spending (OOPS) as a share of total health expenditure remained above 35%, and increased in real terms. Expenditure on reproductive health per woman of reproductive age varied from US$ 1.0 in 2002 to US$ 6.3 in 2012. Expenditure on maternal and neonatal health per pregnant woman increased from US$ 34 in 2000 to US$ 512 in 2012, and per capita expenditure on under-five children increased from US$ 5.6 in 2000 to US$ 148.6 in 2012. Increased expenditure on RMNCH reflects a greater political support for RMNCH, along with greater emphasis on social assistance, family planning, and health reforms targeting poor areas, and a recent emphasis on antipoverty and crosscutting equitable policies and programmes focused on nutrition and maternal and neonatal mortality. Increasing domestic RMNCH expenditure likely enabled Peru to achieve substantial health gains. Peru can provide useful lessons to other countries struggling to achieve sustained gains in RMNCH by relying on their own health financing.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30379907 PMCID: PMC6209344 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0206455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Conceptual framework for drivers of RMNCH expenditure.
Fig 2Total health expenditure (a), government health expenditure (b) and private health expenditure (c) as percentage of GDP.
Average annual rate of growth, and over entire period, health expenditure variables, Peru.
| Expenditure indicator | Coefficient of annual variation | SE | p-value | Period | % change during the period | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GDP per capita (constant 2012 US$) | 121.074 | 37.673 | 0.006 | 1995–2012 | 42.4 | |
| Total health expenditure as % of GDP | 0.038 | 0.011 | 0.003 | 1995–2012 | 18.2 | |
| Per capita total health expenditure, (constant 2012 US$) | 8.876 | 1.792 | < 0.001 | 1995–2012 | 64.3 | |
| Government health expenditure as % of GDP | 0.019 | 0.009 | 0.046 | 1995–2012 | 21.7 | |
| Government health expenditure as % of Total Government Expenditure | 0.016 | 0.039 | 0.682 | 1995–2012 | 6.1 | |
| Per capita out-of-pocket spending, (constant 2012 US$) | 2.811 | 0.782 | 0.002 | 1995–2012 | 51.8 | |
| Out-of-pocket spending as % of total health expenditure | 0.000 | 0.121 | 0.998 | 1995–2012 | -7.6 | |
| ODA expenditure per woman of reproductive age, (constant 2012 US$) | 0.137 | 0.064 | 0.065 | 2003–2012 | 507.7 | |
| ODA expenditure per pregnant woman (constant 2012 US$) | 0.144 | 0.473 | 0.768 | 2003–2012 | -36.2 | |
| ODA expenditure per under-five child (constant 2012 US$) | 0.217 | 0.546 | 0.701 | 2003–2012 | 21.9 | |
| Expenditure on reproductive health activities (constant 2012 US$/woman of reproductive age) | 0.458 | 0.134 | 0.008 | 2002–2012 | 482.5 | |
| Expenditure on maternal-neonatal health activities (constant 2012 US$/pregnant woman) | 30.308 | 4.262 | < 0.001 | 2000–2012 | 1395.6 | |
| Expenditure on child health activities (constant 2012 US$/under-5 child) | 10.314 | 1.882 | < 0.001 | 1999–2012 | 966.7 | |
*GDP used for comparison purposes. Values in columns 2, 3 and 4 come from the regressions for linear time trends.
Fig 3Government health expenditure (GHE) as percentage of total government expenditure (TGE).
Fig 4Out-of-pocket expenditure: per capita (a), and as percentage of total health expenditure (b).
Fig 5ODA expenditure on reproductive (a), maternal-neonatal (b) and child health (c).
Fig 6Total ODA expenditure on RMNCH as percentage of total domestic RMNCH expenditure.
Fig 7Domestic expenditure on reproductive health (a), maternal-neonatal health (b) and child health (c).
Change of ratio of domestic RMNCH expenditure to RMNCH coverage, Peru.
| RMNCH expenditure indicator and coverage indicator | Change of expenditure/coverage ratio over time (%) | Period | |
|---|---|---|---|
| % of women with family planning satisfied | 9382.2 | 2004–2012 | |
| % of women with at least 4 antenatal care visits | 985.2 | 2000–2012 | |
| % of live births attended by skilled birth attendants | 922.9 | 2000–2012 | |
| Composite coverage index | 1500.4 | 2000–2012 | |