The impact of targeted subsidies for facility-based delivery on access to care and equity Evidence from a population-based study in rural Burkina Faso

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Abstract

We conducted the first population-based impact assessment of a financing policy introduced in Burkina Faso in 2007 on women's access to delivery services. The policy offers an 80 per cent subsidy for facility-based delivery. We collected information on delivery in five repeated cross-sectional surveys carried out from 2006 to 2010 on a representative sample of 1050 households in rural Nouna Health District. Over the 5 years, the proportion of facility-based deliveries increased from 49 to 84 per cent (P0.001). The utilization gap across socio-economic quintiles, however, remained unchanged. The amount received for all services associated with births decreased by 67 per cent (P0.001), but women continued to pay on average 1423 CFA (\[euro]1655 CFA), about 500 CFA more than the set tariff of 900 CFA. Our findings indicate the operational effectiveness of the policy in increasing the use of facility-based delivery services for women. The potential to reduce maternal mortality substantially has not yet been assessed by health outcome measures of neonatal and maternal mortality. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Ltd.

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APA

De Allegri, M., Ridde, V., Louis, V. R., Sarker, M., Tiendrebéogo, J., Yé, M., … Jahn, A. (2012). The impact of targeted subsidies for facility-based delivery on access to care and equity Evidence from a population-based study in rural Burkina Faso. Journal of Public Health Policy, 33(4), 439–453. https://doi.org/10.1057/jphp.2012.27

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