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RBF Approach. Rita Tetteh-Quarshie Rtetteh-quarshie@snvworld.org. Results Based Financing in Ghana: About getting started. Presentation . Background of health situation (MCH) in Ghana Planned pilot and implementation of PBF in Ghana by WB The Wapuli case Way forward .
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RBF Approach Rita Tetteh-Quarshie Rtetteh-quarshie@snvworld.org Results Based Financing in Ghana: About getting started
Presentation • Background of health situation (MCH) in Ghana • Planned pilot and implementation of PBF in Ghana by WB • The Wapuli case • Way forward
Health spending did increase… • Recently, Ghana reached a middle income status • In Ghana health financing is close to reach Abuja Target for health spending (=15% of total government expenditure) • The per capita expenditure on health has grown from a level of $6.7 in 1996 to $13.5 in 2005 and $27 in 2008 • Around 93% of the government contribution is used to pay for salaries, limiting funding available for services and infrastructure • This is a result of the 2006 salary increase – about triplication - which was not performance based
But performance is off track… • U-5 mortality is 80 deaths per 1,000 live births, with 90 in rural and 75 in urban areas. • Infant mortality rate is 49 per 1,000 live births in urban and 56 in rural areas. • The ’08 Ghana Maternal Health Survey estimates maternal death (MMR) at 451 per 100.000 live births. Health indicators in Ghana appear off track and this affects particularly poor and rural households; i.e.
Upper East 47% Upper West 46% Northern 27% BrongAhafo 66% Volta 54% Ashanti 73% Eastern 61% Western 62% Central 54% Greater Accra 84% Deliveries attended by Skilled Provider – by Region Delivery by Skilled Provider by Region Ghana: 59%
Upper East 14% Upper West 21% Northern 6% BrongAhafo 22% Volta 21% Ashanti 16% Eastern 17% Western 13% Central 17% Greater Accra 22% Use of Modern FP Methods by Region Ghana: 17% 35% unmet need among currently married women
Reforming the Health System of Ghana? • Overall consensus: “no copy & pasting of the Rwanda model” • Governance institutions and “rules of the game” do exist • Governance structure is complex, preferably no new institutions • Existing funding channels, etc • So, adapting to the existing Ghanaian context – but how? • Hesitation at Central level to kick-off: • Agree on the principles – but how to implement them in Ghana? • Sustainability: macro-economic implications? • Again top-up of salaries health staff through RBF? • We have already an ex-post provider payment mechanism, NHIS • Again another reform? • Assisted delivery is already free of charge
Opportunities and threats to start-up RBF • Opportunity: existing, functioning governance structures • Like NHIA: already a purchaser with a verification function (quantity and quality of services) • Most facilities already accredited (Q/C) • District Assembly is already (by law) in charge of health • Threat: the same existing governance structures • Resistance to change the “enterprise culture” and power relations in institutions as well as in individuals • Changing the “rules of the game” will not be easily • Actually no clear-cut functional split of functions existing • Deconcentrated system – complicating checks & balances
National RBF program (MOH/WB)) • Preparatory activities: Aide Memoire and Concept Note ready to be signed (March) • Pre-pilot (2011) to inform pilot (2012 - 2013) in Eastern and Northern Regions • Pre-pilot (500 K): regional program to prepare actors • Supply-side and demand-side incentives • Situational analysis, legal and financial-amin issues, • Bottleneck studies household, facility, Local Govt • Instrument development • testing payments in 1 district (ER, E Akim), 1 in NR? • Pilot (11,5 Mio + 1 Mio for Impact Evaluation): • All districts in NR and ER: 240 Facilities
Operational research: How to introduce RBF in Ghana (SNV/KIT experiences) • Step 1: Regional workshops to identify need and common vision • Step 2: Situational analysis on baselines • Step 3: Workshops to identify and match priorities from medical and non-medical actors to agree on institutional framework (to be tested) • Step 4: Assist health facilities to develop results-based action plans on identified priorities • Step 5: Negotiation on contract (and agree on incentives, which may come out of existing funds) • Step 6: Implementation (3 months cycle), evaluation and learning, payment of incentives, renegotiation of contract step 6 : Performance Based Financing step 5 : contracting approach step 4 : develop results-based action plans at health centres & community level step 3: Identify matching priorities : situational analysis and training non-medical partners to anlyse data step 2 : joint understanding of need to develop alternative institutional performance framework step 1
RBF-institutional framework, hypothesis SNV/KIT MoHealthpolicies, norms & standards, resource allocation Donors MoFinance FundsNHIA Steering CtteeRegional Coord Council Regulation/ DHMT- quality ass/ accreditation- respect norms & standards- training and supervision Distr AssContracting Area Council verification facilitynegotiation Fund HolderDMHIS/ payer Provision of care- curative, - prevention, - promotion Representatives Perform: productivity & quality patients Community CSO, NGO, Universities verification household
Upper East Upper West Northern BrongAhafo Volta Ashanti Eastern Western Central Greater Accra Regions where PBF is being piloted by SNV
Intervention methodology • Lessons learning from experiences elsewhere • Define the building blocks for CA/ PBF in other contexts; • Site-visits to develop and adapt the working hypothesis with future local contracting partners at the operational level; • defining the institutional framework for the CA/PBF; • development of instruments – contextualizing those developed for elsewhere (Rwanda, Mali, ….) • Supporting Local Capacity Builders (NGOs) to support local actors to take up their future contracting roles; • Negotiation between contracting actors • Developing results-based action plans
The case of Wapuli sub-district • Understanding performance and quality management, current theory and global practice • PBF Introductory workshop at Saboba District: DA,CSOs, NHIS,DHMT, Providers • Health baseline data was presented to stakeholders, put into result chain • Issues prioritized for the sub-district health team to work on were: • -Skill delivery • -ANC4+ attendance • -Family planning. • -Malnutrition • Issues were confirmed at a community durbar at a health sub-district.
Some results (process) • Training SNV health advisors and LCB • Institutional framework for RBF developed: • Who will purchase, verify, etc? • Measures taken by the clinic to increase outputs: • Formation of steering committee by the community to help in educating other community • A system for compensating TBAs for bringing referring pregnant women to the clinic for delivery (instant and annual) • The clinic now opens everyday for ANC and FP activities and the staff work beyond their working hours. • Though slow but the traditional leaders are taken measures to release pregnant women to the clinics.
Next steps…. • Further training of NGOs to support actors • Preparing non-medical actors: holding providers to account on results • Preparing medical actors: being creative and innovative to achieve results (enterprise culture) • Tools development (like verification: mHealth?)
The approach leaves ‘room’ to address some known challenges during the process
Questions to the audience…. • How to finance scaling-up to national level ?!? • Assessing cost-benefit of increased transaction-costs? • Pay for results: to top-up of salaries – or to invest in conditions quality of care and « indirect costs »? • Ho to avoid the “vertical” and “centralistic” approach of RBF (focusing on MDG4,5)