Effects of performance based financing on facility autonomy and accountability: Evidence from Zambia

IF 1.7 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Chitalu Miriam Chama-Chiliba , Peter Hangoma , Collins Chansa , Mulenga Chonzi Mulenga
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Several low and lower- middle income countries have been using Performance-Based Financing (PBF) to motivate health workers to increase the quantity and quality of health services. Studies have demonstrated that PBF can contribute to improved health service delivery and health outcomes, but there is limited evidence on the mechanisms through which PBF can necessitate changes in the health system. Using difference-in-difference and synthetic control analytical approaches, we investigated the effect of PBF on autonomy and accountability at service delivery level using data from a 3-arm cluster randomised trial in Zambia. The arms consisted of PBF where financing is linked to outputs in terms of quality and quantity (intervention 1), input financing where funding is fully provided to finance all required inputs regardless of performance (intervention 2), and the current standard of care where there is input financing but with possible challenges in funding (pure control). The results show an increase in autonomy at PBF sites compared to sites in the pure control arm and an increase in accountability at PBF sites compared to sites in both the input-financing and pure control arms. On the other hand, there were no effects on autonomy and accountability in the input-financing sites compared to the pure control sites. The study concludes that PBF can improve financial and managerial autonomy and accountability, which are important for improving health service delivery. However, within the PBF districts, the magnitude of change was different, implying that management and leadership styles matter. Future research could examine whether personal attributes, managerial capacities of the facility managers, and the operating environment have an effect on autonomy and accountability.

Abstract Image

基于绩效的融资对设施自主权和问责制的影响:来自赞比亚的证据
一些低收入和中低收入国家一直在使用基于绩效的融资(PBF)来激励卫生工作者提高卫生服务的数量和质量。研究表明,PBF有助于改善卫生服务的提供和卫生结果,但关于PBF促使卫生系统进行必要变革的机制的证据有限。我们使用差异中的差异和综合控制分析方法,利用赞比亚一项三组随机试验的数据,研究了PBF对服务提供水平的自主性和问责制的影响。这些部门包括PBF,即资金在质量和数量上与产出挂钩(干预措施1),投入融资,即资金完全提供,以资助所有所需的投入,而不考虑绩效(干预措施2),以及目前的护理标准,即有投入融资,但在资金方面可能存在挑战(纯控制)。结果表明,与纯控制部门的站点相比,PBF站点的自主权有所增加,与投入融资和纯控制部门的站点相比,PBF站点的问责制有所增加。另一方面,与纯控制站点相比,投入融资站点对自主性和问责制没有影响。该研究的结论是,PBF可以改善财务和管理自主权和问责制,这对改善卫生服务提供非常重要。然而,在PBF地区内,变化的幅度是不同的,这意味着管理和领导风格的影响。未来的研究可以考察设施管理者的个人属性、管理能力和运营环境是否对自主性和问责制有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Policy Open
Health Policy Open Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
审稿时长
40 weeks
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