Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Irene Akua Agyepong and Richard.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Di McIntyre Chair, AfHEA Scientific.
Advertisements

Using IFRS Based Financial Statements In Corporate Governance Gareth Davies Local Authority (Scotland) Accounts Advisory Committee secretary CIPFA Policy.
Module 2: Legal Aspects of Associations & Non-Profits Presented by the Southern Early Childhood Association.
HEALTH EQUITY: THE INDIAN CONTEXT Subodh S Gupta.
Congressional Black Caucus Community Health Centers Forum Lisa Cox, Assistant Director, Federal Affairs September 27, 2007 School-Health Financing: What.
PRIVATE HEALTH SECTOR FOR QUALITY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE HEALTH SECTOR Trusted Partner in the delivery of Quality Healthcare Dr. Samwel Ogillo Program Manager.
Shaping UHC Policy for Post 2015: Opportunities & Risks Jeanette Vega MD, DrPH Managing Director of Health NHIS 10 Anniversary Conference Accra, November.
The Rhode Island Chronic Care Sustainability Initiative: Building a Patient-Centered Medical Home Pilot in Rhode Island.
Ministry of Health Sources of Dissatisfaction in Albanian Health Care System Zamira Sinoimeri, MD, MSC Deputy Minister of Health Albania.
To Alter or Not to Alter: The Fate of Exemptions For Children Under Five Years Under National Health Insurance Presentation at AfHEA Inuagural Conference,
Understanding the impact of social health protection programs on social exclusion Soumitra Ghosh* and Harshad Thakur for correspondence
Willingness to pay for private voluntary health insurance in southeast Nigeria Obinna Onwujekwe a and Edit V. Velényi b a Health policy Research Group/Department.
Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Patent medicines vendors a resource.
Removing financial barriers to access reproductive, maternal and newborn health services: the challenges and policy implications for Human Resources for.
Universal Coverage Through National Health Insurance In South Africa: Okore Okorafor Health Policy Unit Medi-Clinic Southern Africa 15 March 2011 Do quality.
Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Equitable Financing of Primary.
Demographic change, pension reform, and household saving in urban China.
Implementation challenges of health financing policy reforms: experiences from Sub-Saharan Africa Peter Kamuzora Institute of Development Studies University.
Sustainability of recurrent expenditure on public social welfare programs: expenditure analysis of the free maternal care programme of the Ghana NHIS Presentation.
Count us in! The growing role of learning support programs in achieving education outcomes for disadvantaged students Anne Pate Research Officer, Research.
Impact of Hospital Provider Payment Mechanism on Household Health Service Utilization in Vietnam (preliminary results) Sarah Bales Public Policy in Asia,
Evaluation of family planning program
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Jean-Benoît Falisse, Bruno Meessen,
FMSiS and benchmarking a seminar at the bursars conference 05 July 2010 Presented by Simon Maddocks Dave Phillips David Dilling.
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Examining community-based health.
Access to health care, social protection, and household costs of illness proposal Cost of illness working group INDEPTH AGM 2009, Pune.
Energy Issues in Peru and the Andes: Environmental and Social Aspects George Washington University January 28, 2005 Dr. Robert H. Montgomery Head, Environmental.
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Eugenia Amporfu Kwame Nkrumah University.
Seite 1 Page 1 Can Private Health Insurance Companies be used as a Tool to Reach the Poor?: Innovations in Increasing Access to Gender Based.
The Private Finance Initiative n Advantages * Benefits of the PFI The major appeal of the PFI for the government is that the cost of the hospital does.
PERFORMANCE CONTRACTS IN KENYA RESTORING AND BUILDING TRUST IN GOVERNMENT THROUGH INNOVATIONS TO PROMOTE QUALITY OF PUBLIC SERVICE PRESENTATION BY Ambassador.
The effects of reducing the direct cost of care on health services utilization and health outcomes in Ghana: a randomized controlled trial EVELYN KORKOR.
KOFI Q. DADZIE CHARLENE A. DADZIE EVELYN WINSTON CHARLES BLANKSON AFRICA RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS APRIL 11, 2015 Explaining the underutilization.
Why human rights budget work is important Because human rights are/should be central to governance Because human rights are/should be central to governance.
Financing Health Care in Uganda Florence Baingana MSc HPPF 1.
Innovative funding for infrastructure services: the use of Output Based Aid in the Honduras water sector Cledan Mandri-Perrott Infrastructure, Economics.
Family Health Program Brazil Coverage and access Aluísio J D Barros Andréa D Bertoldi Juraci Cesar Cesar G Victora Epidemiologic Research Center, UFPel.
Stakeholder consultations Kyiv May 13, Why stakeholder consultations? To help improve project design and implementation To inform people about changes.
PETER GONDA Conservative Institute of M.R. Štefánik, Member of Socia Fdn., SLOVAKIA Financing of Long Term Care in Slovakia: Comparison with other OECD.
Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Economic Evaluation of Flying.
Efficiency, equity and feasibility of strategies to identify the poor: an application to premium exemptions under national health insurance in Ghana Caroline.
T Mukotekwa 1, D Patel, B Engelsmann 1 1 Organization for Public Health Interventions and Development Trust (OPHID), Harare, Zimbabwe Zimbabwe National.
Does CHPS Increase Access to Family Planning in Rural Ghana? A case study of Nkwanta District Dr. J. Koku Awoonor-Williams Nkwanta Health Development Centre.
Conference Objectives To highlight the rising number of people living with HIV in Europe who are unaware of their serostatus To identify political, structural,
Session 8: Statistical Infrastructure Joseph Ilboudo UNECA/ACS Workshop Review of RRSF Implementation.
Revenue-Based Development Incentives Property Tax Revenues Bob Rychlicki Kane, McKenna and Associates, Inc.
Retha Britz Copyright 2013 All rights reserved for this presentation 1 Other important considerations for RECs Retha Britz.
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Removal of user fees for maternal.
HOUSEHOLD BUDGET SURVEY EVALUATION. PROJECT OVERVIEW PRECURSORS State Program on Poverty Reduction & Sustainable Development ( ) CSOs given the.
Impact of evaluations matters IDEAS Conference 2011, Amman “Evidence to Policy: Lessons Learnt from Influential Impact Evaluations” Presenter: Daniel Svoboda,
Measuring costs related to the provision of health services for young people Karin Stenberg Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Development 16.
2 nd Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Saly – Senegal, 15 th - 17 th March 2011 Characteristics and Operation of.
HEALTH FINANCING MOH - HPG JAHR UPDATE ON POLICIES Eleventh Party Congress -Increase state investment while simultaneously mobilizing social mobilization.
Reaching the Poor: The Case of Universal Coverage in Thailand Chutima Suraratdecha Somying Saithanu Viroj Tangcharoensathien International Health Policy.
Public Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Surveys 11 th International Anti-Corruption Conference Seoul May 26, 2003 Magnus Lindelow Development.
Health care funding sources Sources Proportion (%)MechanismsDistribution Gvt 30Taxes (direct & indirect)D –progressive ID-regressive?? Donor 16Thro’ budget/Off.
Overview of China’s health care reform Wen Chen, Ph.D., Professor Fudan School of Public Health March 21, 2016.
Knowledge sharing workshop on social protection for vulnerable Groups ILO STEP/SFP Programmes October 15 th,16 th &17 th 2007 Bangkok, Thailand By Ansgar.
South West Hepatitis C Needs Assessment Dr Maya Gobin Health Protection Services (South West)
© Plan International Xu Jian, Country Health Advisor, Plan China Piloting Children’s Medical Insurance in Rural China: The Experience of Plan China.
 At the end of the lecture students should be able to –  Explain non profitable health services.  Discuss HMO.  Explain capitation plan and salary.
Coordination of health care in the EU Jakub Wtorek European Commission Directorate General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion Unit: Active Ageing,
Stakeholder consultations
Health Care Financing: User Fees
Improving Access to Treatment of PLHIV, the Role of the National Health Insurance Scheme
Community of Practice Conference March 18-19, 2011 Saly (Senegal)
Straight Talk for Seniors: How Will Health Care Reform Change Your Health Care? June 2013.
Dr. Joseph Ghartey Ampiah University of Cape Coast Ghana
LEGAL REQUIREMENTS FOR ACT 13 OF 2006
International Conference on Improving Use of Medicines
Presentation transcript:

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Irene Akua Agyepong and Richard Afedi Nagai A comparison of user fees plus fee exemptions and health insurance policy effectiveness for children under five in Ghana

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Objectives  To assess effectiveness and reasons for effectiveness or otherwise of the user fee plus exemptions and the health insurance policies in removing the financial access barriers to outpatient clinical care for children under five in Ghana posed by user fees.

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Conceptual model POLICY EFFECTIVENESS HINDERING & ENABLING BENEFICIARY(CLIENT) FACTORS Acceptability of the policy & what it offers (benefits) Access to information about policy Benefits How to access the benefits Direct & indirect costs in accessing benefits HINDERING & ENABLING OPERATIONAL TRANSLATOR FACTORS Policy implementation guidelines Operational translator agenda, needs & interests Incentives & disincentives for ‘compliance’ POLICY DESIGN

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Ghanaian financing context  Tax funded system with free public sector services post independence (1957)  User fees with a some fee exemptions 1985  Addition of more fee exemptions programs  Under five, AN, elderly 1999  Delivery 2003, 2005  CBI starting 1992 (Nkoranza)  Dangme West experiment starting 2000  NHIS 2003

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Study Area  Greater Accra Region  88% urban, high in migration (4.4% growth rate, 2.4% natural increase)  Focus on children living in rural and urban poor areas  Deprived rural district of subsistence farmers & fishermen (Dangme West)  Deprived sub-metropolitan area with mix of indigenous Ga and multi-ethnic migrant settlements (Ashiedu-Keteke)

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Methods  Review of documents  Community focus group discussions (3 urban site, 5 rural site)  In-depth interviews with public sector facility heads (3/4 rural & 2/2 urban)  Structured questionnaire administered to principal childcare takers (300/study site selected by cluster sampling [30*10])  Retrospective analysis of secondary data on public sector outpatient service utilization by insured and uninsured children under five for the period 2000 – 2004

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Results - Effectiveness  Effectiveness measured as % of children using the OPD of public sector facilities who:  Got a full exemption from payment of user fees  Through the user fees plus exemptions policy  Through health insurance  Who had to pay user fees despite the existence of the two policies and programs

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Results - Effectiveness  Manual record keeping in the facilities  Attendance data kept at OPD records office  Financial data in accounts office but with copies of attendance numbers ?from OPD records office.  OPD utilization and exemptions financial data from the rural site facilities consistent between OPD records and accounting records.  Data in urban site conflicting with numbers of children recorded as exempted higher than numbers of children recorded as having used the OPD.  ?poor and unsynchronized record keeping ?deliberate misreporting:  Facility management could not explain the discrepancies  Insurance started in rural site in 2005 & there were only 27 insured children presenting at OPD

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Results - Effectiveness  Policy introduced in Operation in rural site started 2000 and in urban site Reason for different start dates unclear.  The estimation of the average claim per child exempted in the sub- metropolitan site facilities showed an unrealistically low average per child exempted in 2002, and a constant low average of about ¢ 5000 (US$ 0.56) in subsequent years.  The actual cost of an OPD visit for a child under five during this period was much more  Urban facilities management explained that apart from a few children e.g. severely malnourished, they were only exempting children from the consultation fee of ¢ 5000 (US$ 0.56). They paid all other bills  Rural site approach was to fully exempt some children and have others fully pay all user fees  Insurance started as experiment in rural site in 2000 and data was available for all 5 years

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Average Exemption claim per child in rural and urban study sites (old cedis)

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 % Children 0-5 covered by different payment mechanisms for primary care in rural district

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Hindering and Enabling client factors  Almost all respondents (rural and urban) knew about exemptions and insurance policies  However sometimes vague on the details – especially insurance in the urban area where it was relatively new  HOWEVER: Did not ask for an exemption if the staff at the facility did not volunteer one even when they knew of the policy because they were afraid of negative staff reactions

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Hindering and Enabling client factors  Facility user fees were not the only barrier for the poor  Quality of care was a concern  Geographic access was an issue, but sometimes quality was ranked higher with people bypassing nearer facilities for perceived better quality

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Hindering and enabling operational translator factors  No written guidelines for the exemptions policy  Written guidelines available for insurance  Long delays in exemptions reimbursement, partial reimbursement  Acknowledge negative reactions to clients asking about exemptions and attributed it to the perception that the policy would make them bankrupt if they implemented it to the letter  Generally central government appeared to shift the risks of the exemptions scheme to providers  Providers reacted to protect their interest by modifying the policy (as described)  Insurance was generally working and provider trust that they would be paid at the time of the study (2005/06)  Concerning reliabiilty of provider payments, things have changed since – “déjà vu?”

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Conclusions  The user fees plus exemptions policy was not as effective as hoped  Among the causes was the failure to provide adequate funds for implementation and the shifting of risk to providers  The health insurance policy needs to learn from the failures of the exemptions policy  A policy is only as good as its implementation arrangements, and effective policy making power can be diffused between central policy elites who design policies and programs and peripheral operational translators to whom these policies are handed down for implementation

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Conclusions  Unfortunately, central policy elites often go ahead to design policies and accompanying programs and pass them down for implementation on the assumption of a clean dichotomy between policy making which is a central function and implementation which is a peripheral function; without giving adequate attention to the power of peripheral operational translators in policy, and the incentives to make them comply and implement the policy as designed or modify it  Some, though not all, of the observed failures of well intentioned policies developed at the central level and passed down for ‘compliance’, without attention to the interests and needs of operational translators may be related to this failure to recognize that operational translators also holds a form of power in effective policy development and implementation

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Sustainable financing arrangements that effectively protect the vulnerable need more careful multi-factorial thought and analysis in design and implementation than is perhaps realized

Inaugural Conference of the African Health Economics and Policy Association (AfHEA) Accra - Ghana, 10th - 12th March 2009 Thank You