| Literature DB >> 30574295 |
Jessica Gergen1, Erik Josephson2, Christina Vernon3, Samantha Ski4, Sara Riese4, Sebastian Bauhoff5, Supriya Madhavan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Performance-based financing (PBF) both measures and determines payments based on the quality of care delivered and is emerging as a potential tool to improve quality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30574295 PMCID: PMC6286672 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.08.021003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Cross country comparison of MCH context. Sources: All figures are from The World Bank Group. Retrieved from http://data.wordbank.org/ (2014) with the following exceptions: Nigeria, Prenatal care visit (1 ANC) and skilled delivery (Sources: The World Bank Group, 2013. Retrieved from http://data.wordbank.org/); 4 ANC visits completed (Source: The World Health Organization, 2013. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.REPWOMEN39?lang=en); Mozambique Prenatal care visit (1 ANC) and skilled delivery (Sources: The World Bank Group, 2011. Retrieved from http://data.worldbank.org); 4 ANC visits completed (Source: The World Health Organization, 2013. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.REPWOMEN39?lang=en); Senegal, 4 ANC visits completed (Source: The World Health Organization, 2012-2014. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.REPWOMEN39?lang=en); Malawi, DRC, Zambia, 4 ANC visits completed (Source: The World Health Organization, 2013-2014. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.REPWOMEN39?lang=en); Kyrgyzstan, 4 ANC visits completed (Source: The World Health Organization, 2014. Retrieved from http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.REPWOMEN39?lang=en).
PBD program descriptions
| Country | Description |
|---|---|
| The Nigerian Ministry of Health partnered with the World Bank and the Health Results Innovation Trust Fund to create a US$ 170 million performance based financing (PBF) scheme in 2011. The project was pre-piloted in one Local Government Authority (LGA) in each of three different states: Adamawa, Nasarawa, and Ondo and was gradually scaled up until January, 2015 when it reached coverage of 459 health centers and 26 hospitals. As of January 2015, the pilot covered approximately 50% of the LGAs in each of the three states. An additional financing of US$ 145 million for the NSHIP is being prepared. Of this financing, US$ 125 million is International Development Association (IDA), and US$ 20million will be from the Global Financing Facility (GFF). The operation in the north will focus on the States of Borno, Yobe, Gombe, Taraba and Bauchi states, with a particular attention for Borno and Yobe States in mid-2016. | |
| The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) PBF pilot is the largest and longest running PBF program in the country. The pilot is financed by US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) through the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) at 11 million USD for three years. The goals of the pilot are to accelerate the achievement of the Maternal and Child Health and HIV/AIDS-focused health outcomes. The PBF pilot was initiated in January 2011 in two provinces (Gaza and Nampula). As of 2015, the PBF program is continuing in the two pilot provinces in a total of 142 health facilities, 65 in Nampula and 77 in Gaza, equating to 31% and 57% population coverage respectively. This project is inactive as of 2016. | |
| The PROSANI PBF program is a USAID-funded program co-implemented by the government of DRC and Management Sciences of Health (MSH). The PROSANI PBF implementation operated in four provinces, East Kasai, West Kasai, Katanga and South Kivu, with the goal of strengthening the health system and improving MCH, nutrition, and hygiene and sanitation. In 2013, the program included 118 health centers and seven general hospitals, which were all public health facilities. PROSANI was one of four PBF programs in DRC, as of 2015. Efforts to consolidate the PBF implementations were completed as of 2017, and the launch of a national PBF program was active as of 2018. | |
| The Senegal Ministry of Health began its own PBF pilot in 2012 after visiting the PBF program in Rwanda. The program is supported by USAID and the World Bank with the goal to motivate health workers, improve quality of care, improve health outcomes, and strengthen the capacity of district health teams. A pilot started in the Kolda and Kaffrine Districts of the Kolda and Kaffrine regions in 2012, and was expanded to cover all districts in these two regions in 2013, with an additional four regions in 2015. The Senegal PBF program has a rare form of pay for performance in that facilities and districts are paid against the achievement of coverage targets, which are negotiated in annual performance contracts. The quality score is then used to deflate the payment amount. | |
| The Results-Based Financing Initiative for Maternal and Neonatal Health (RBF4MNH) is supported by the German (KfW) and Norwegian governments, and uniquely intervenes on both the supply and the demand side. The project’s primary focus is to improve access to and quality of maternity, newborn and child health services. In April 2013, a pilot program across a cohort of 17 basic health facilities in four districts was initiated. The pilot was then expanded to cover the entirety of all four districts in 2014, including Mchinji, Dedza, and Ntcheu in the Central zone and Balaka district in the Southern zone). | |
| The Kyrgyzstan PBF program, supported by the Health Results Innovation Trust Fund (HRITF) with a project budget of US$ 11 million USD (2014-2017), only includes secondary health facilities and focuses solely on quality of care. The Kyrgyz Health Results-Based Financing project comprises of two interlinked pilot interventions to reduce Kyrgyzstan’s persistently high maternal and neonatal death rates. | |
| The first pilot intervention consists of a randomized controlled trial implemented to test the feasibility and impact of a pay-for-quality performance-based financing (PBF) scheme at rayon (district) hospitals. The first pilot includes three arms, to which all district hospitals were randomly assigned: Arm 1 included 22 district hospitals receiving enhanced supervision to support quality improvement linked to performance-based payment based on hospital quality scores; Arm 2 included 21 rayon-level hospitals receiving enhanced supervision to support quality improvement only and no performance-based payments; and Arm 3 with 21 rayon-level hospitals receiving no interventions. Hospital quality is measured using a Balanced Score Card (BSC) approach. The second PBF intervention is soon to be piloted at the primary care level, providing PBF payments based on the quality and on the quantity of services delivered in four rayons. | |
| From 2008-2014, the Government of Zambia and the World Bank partnered on a project to design and implement a provider payment system that could accelerate the country’s reduction of under-five and maternal mortality in 11 districts (incrementally scaled). The pilot focused on rural areas for two reasons. First, maternal and child health status is lower in rural than urban areas. Second, 72% of the poor in Zambia live in rural areas, and the rural poverty rate is reportedly 80%. The Zambia RBF pays the providers for service provision and quality of high priority maternal and child health services. The project introduced a performance-based provider payment to motivate frontline health workers to work at full capacity and improve health service quality, as well as motivate District Medical Offices to fulfill critical supervisory and management functions. | |
| Starting in 2016, the Zambia Health Services Improvement Project (ZHSIP). The RBF component under the ZHSIP was officially launched and seeks to expand the RBF horizontally and vertically by the end of the project in June 2019 [ |
PBF – performance-based financing
Changes in the number of quality of care checklist indicators following checklist revisions
| Case study countries | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Funder | USAID | KfW, NORAD | World Bank | CDC | World Bank | World Bank | World Bank | |||||||
| Geographic coverage of Program (number of facilities included) | 80 health zones, 143 health centers | 4 districts | National | 2 provinces | 3 states | 3 districts | 10 districts | |||||||
| Payment type for quality* | Unconditional inflator | Unconditional inflator | Unconditional inflator (Arm 1)† | Inflator, threshold (≥60%) | Inflator, threshold (≥50%) | Unconditional deflator | Inflator, threshold (≥61%) | |||||||
| Payment allocation per recipient, % of total payment (health facility, health providers) | 40%, 60% | 30%, 70%, 0% | 40%, 25%, (35% flexible depending on facility preference)‡ | 60%, 40%, 0% | 50%, 50%, 0%d | 25%, 75%, 0% | 75%, 25%, 0%§ | |||||||
| Number of quality indicators (by HS Level) | Primary: 143 | Primary, secondary: 76 | Secondary: 29 | Primary, secondary (PCI): 179 | Primary: 182 | Primary: 72 | Primary: 76 | |||||||
| Tertiary: 158 | Primary, Secondary, Tertiary (IMM; IMQ): 81, 26 | Secondary: 228 | Tertiary: 109 | |||||||||||
| Number of quantity Services (quantity indicators) | ||||||||||||||
| Verification frequency (quality) | Quarterly | Quarterly | Quarterly | Bi-annually | Quarterly | Quarterly | Quarterly | |||||||
| Verifier (quality) | Regional govt. team & PROSANI team | Regional govt. team | Ex-ante through mixed team of consultants and Mandatory Health Insurance Fund staff, with peer hospital staff serving as observers | Regional govt. team + managing NGO | Ex-ante through district team for health centers, and through the Hospital management board for the hospitals | National & regional govt. team | Ex-ante, contracted hospitals (peer) and independent consultants | |||||||
CDC – Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, IMM – Maternal Health Checklist, IMQ – HIV/AIDS Checklists, KfW – German Development Bank, PCI – Prevention and Hygiene Checklist, USAID – United States Agency for International Development
*Payment Type: Conditional (threshold) deflator: Quality score deflates quantity payment continuously from 100% to minimum threshold. Payment is 0% if quality score is below the threshold. Continuous deflator (no threshold): Quality score deflates quantity payment continuously from 100% to 0% (no minimum threshold). Conditional inflator (Inflator, threshold): Quality score dictates amount of quality bonus received contingent upon achievement of a minimum quality score (threshold) required to receive any of the bonus. Unconditional inflator (no threshold): Quality bonus pool available; quality score dictates amount of quality bonus received.
†The first pilot intervention consists of a randomized controlled trial implemented to test the feasibility and impact of a pay-for-quality performance-based financing (PBF) scheme at rayon (district) hospitals. The first pilot includes three arms, to which all district hospitals were randomly assigned: Arm 1 included 22 district hospitals receiving enhanced supervision to support quality improvement linked to performance-based payment based on hospital quality scores; Arm 2 included 21 rayon-level hospitals receiving enhanced supervision to support quality improvement only and no performance-based payments; and Arm 3 with 21 rayon-level hospitals receiving no interventions. Hospital quality is measured using a Balanced Score Card (BSC) approach.
‡Currently, facilities can spend up to 25% of the bonus for staff incentives, in accordance with guidelines. Facilities are not allowed to use more than 40% of the payment for infrastructure improvements. Other than that, how the payment is spent is to a large degree up the facility.
§Note: in Nigeria and Zambia supervisors receive payment from a separate mechanism.
‖Uses a mixed global budget/output based financed budget (DRGs), and therefore is leveraging volume/quantity of patients.
Figure 2Changes in the number of quality of care checklist indicators following checklist revisions (4 schemes).
Figure 3Median quality of care scores by quarter (data are presented for eight consecutive quarters between 2010 and 2015, during a period in which quality checklists did not undergo revision). Q1, Year 1 is the first quarter we have data recorded for. In many cases Q1 references one of the first quarters of quality checklist implementation. No revisions were introduced in any of the programs in the two year time period shown.