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Fee exemption policies for maternal health services. A Review of 11 African countries Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Ghana, Mali, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Kenya, Senegal, Sierra Leone Fabienne Richard, ITM Antwerp & Matthieu Antony, CERDI Clermont-Ferrand. Purpose of the review.
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Fee exemption policies for maternal health services A Review of 11 African countries Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Ghana, Mali, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Kenya, Senegal, Sierra Leone Fabienne Richard, ITM Antwerp & Matthieu Antony, CERDI Clermont-Ferrand
Purpose of the review • 1st objective:Compare the benefits package covered by the fee exemption policies across the three dimensions of universal coverage: • The breadth (percentage of population covered ) • The depth (range of services covered) • The height (proportion of coveredcosts) 2
The three dimensions of universalcoverage: Exemption policy coverage Couverture de la politique d’exemption 3
Purpose of the review (part 2) • 2nd objective : Compare the funding modalities of these targeted policies • Reimbursement system for health facilities • Estimation of the budget envelope at national level • Forecast versus disbursed budget • … 4
Methodology • Questionnaire developed by the FEM Health team with validation by the workshop organizing committee (2 parts: content and funding) • Pre-test in Burkina Faso • Sent to all countries that participated at the workshop by email to a key informant at central level • Follow-up by telephone and email • Comparative analysis of 11 sheets 5
Chronology of the policies introduction Kenya Phase 1 Senegal Phase 2 Nigeria Phase 1 Ghana Phase 2 Burundi Child under 5, Delivery, C-.Section Kenya Phase 2 Burundi Pregnancy-related diseases Senegal Phase 1 Niger Ghana Phase 3 Nigeria Phase 2 Ghana Phase 1 Mali Burkina Faso C-section Burkina Faso Delivery Morocco Benin Sierra Leone Kenya Phase 3 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 7
Benin Mali Senegal Burkina Faso Burundi Ghana Kenya (according to income) Morocco Niger Nigeria Sierra Leone (+ breastfeeding women) Who is covered? 8
Kenya: some regions only Nigeria: some regions only Senegal: Dakar not covered Benin Burkina Faso Burundi Ghana Morocco Mali Niger Sierra Leone In what area of the country? Targeted regions Everywhere 9
In which hospitals? KenyaGhanaNigeria* * except at tertiary level hospitals Benin Burkina Faso Burundi 10
Which services are covered? Covered by another exemption or subsidy policy DC = Directs obstetric Complications Hyster= hysterectomy Ect.P = Ectopic Pregnancy +++ ++ + 11
Costs covered by the fee exemption or subsidy policies * Emergency Medical Services (EMS) rural in Morocco in isolated areas 12
Proportion of covered costs • The majority of countries cover 100% of the costs of target services under the policy • 2 countries require some co-pay for direct costs of targeted services • Burkina Faso (80% of directs costs) • Kenya (ticket between 1 to 2 $) 13
System set up to comply with different referral levels • Burkina Faso: • Delivery reimbursement = 80% in health centre and district hospitals • Reimbursement = 60% in regional and national hospitals • Morocco: • Exemption policy applied in UHC only for referred women 14
A multitude of targeted exemption policies Most countries also have a national policy to cover the indigent, but they are not always implemented in practice. * Ghana has exemption for Children under 18 enrolling onto the NHIS. 15
Synthesis • The minimum in common in the 11 countries is the management of Caesarean section • Other obstetric complications: • 2 countries do not cover other obstetric complications during labour and interventions other than Caesarean section • 4 countries do not cover postnatal complications • Transport costs: • Only Morocco covers transport from home to the health facility through rural EMS (in 24 provinces with difficult access) • Only 5 of 11 countries cover the costs of transportation between health facilities • Targeting the poorest: • The majority of policies apply to the entire population of pregnant women regardless of their income except for Kenya (policy targets poor pregnant women). 16
Complexity and variety of strategies • There is no single common strategy for fee exemption policies for maternal and child health care = no cut and paste, each country has a different system. • The majority of these policies do not cover all maternal and neonatal care so it is always partially paid for by the patient/family. • Exemption policies for maternal and neonatal care are not unique: • Several other exemption policies target other diseases or populations. • Several countries are simultaneously developing a national health insurance system • Complex architecture for fee exemption policies: • Do health personnel see their place in it? Do populations? • Is there coordination among these different targeted exemption policies? • Is there coordination among these fee exemption policies and institutional framework being set up for health insurance ? 17
Targeted exemption policies :can we do better? Pregnant womenUnder fiveElderly… C-section & DeliveriesTB, Malaria, HIVFamily Planning Health centre Hospitals, 1st, 2nd, 3rd level?