1 / 44

Paying Health Care Providers for Performance: Evidence from Rwanda

Paying Health Care Providers for Performance: Evidence from Rwanda. Paul Gertler UC Berkeley January 2009. Collaboration. Research Team Paulin Basinga, National University of Rwanda Paul Gertler, UC Berkeley Jennifer Sturdy, World Bank

tilden
Download Presentation

Paying Health Care Providers for Performance: Evidence from Rwanda

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Paying Health Care Providers for Performance: Evidence from Rwanda Paul Gertler UC Berkeley January 2009

  2. Collaboration • Research Team • Paulin Basinga, National University of Rwanda • Paul Gertler, UC Berkeley • Jennifer Sturdy, World Bank • Christel Vermeersch, World Bank • Policy Counterpart Team • Agnes Binagwaho, Rwanda Rwanda MOH • Agnes Soucat, World Bank

  3. Overview • Background/Motivation • Rwanda • Program Description • Evaluation Design and Methodology • Baseline Descriptive Statistics • Impact of PBF • Next Steps

  4. Context: Developing World • Africa • Very poor health status • Weak health care systems • Brain drain – doctors & nurses leaving • Massive AID could be wasted • World Wide (WDR 2004) • Low Quality of Care • Training/technology have had small effect on Quality • Provider absenteeism high & effort low

  5. Pay For Performance • Pay Medical Providers a bonus based on performance measurement • Improve quality of care and outcomes • Improve job satisfaction & retention • Organization Challenges • Individuals versus team incentives • Measuring performance • Cheating/Misreporting

  6. Rwanda: Central African Country • 9 million people • Genocide in early 1990s • GNP per capita: 250 US$ • Weak Health Care Infrastructure • 36 Hospitals, 369 health centers • Doctors: 1/50,000 inhabitants • Nurses: 1/3,900 inhabitants; • 17% of nurses in rural areas • Poor health status, but getting better

  7. MDG 4: Infant and child mortality

  8. Performance-based Financing (PBF) • Local Initiative • Objectives • Increase quantity & quality of health services provided • Increase health worker motivation • Financial incentives to providers to see more patients and provide higher quality of care • Increased resources • Financial incentives • Operates through contracts between • Government • Health facilities providing services

  9. Quarterly Payment to Facility i in period t Pj = payment per unit of each PBF service j Uijt= number of patients using service j in facility i in period t Qit = facility i’s quality in period t

  10. PBF Facility Quality Score Where Skit = facility i’s Quality index of Service k • Indicator types: • Structural: Availability of medical equipment/drugs needed to deliver adequate medical care • Process: Clinical content of care (CPGs)

  11. PNC Quality Indicators

  12. Monitoring Facility Reporting • District Comite de Pilotage • Approves quarterly payment • Based on facility reports & independent audits • Random utilization audit (once quarterly) • One focal point per administrative district • Random quality audits (once quarterly) • District supervisors based in District Hospital • Interview random sample of patients • Identify phantom patients • MSH study – less than 3-5% phantom patients

  13. Evaluation Questions: Did PBF… • Increase the quantity of contracted health services delivered? • Improve the quality of contracted health services provided? • Improve child health status?

  14. Identification Strategy • During decentralization, phased rollout at district level • Identified districts without complete PBF in 2005 • Group districts into “similar pairs” based on population density & livelihoods • Decentralization reallocated districts • Some new districts had PBF in an area of the new district • Gov’t rolled PBF to remaining clinics (treatments) • Districts matched to these partials controls • Others: randomly assign one to treatment and other to control • 8 pairs

  15. Isolating the incentive effect • PBF • Performance incentives • Additional resources • Compensate control facilities with equal resources • Average of what treatments receive • Not linked to performance • Money allocated by the health center management

  16. Sample • 165 health facilities • all rural health centers located in districts • 2145 households in catchment areas • Random sample of 14 per clinic • Panel data: 2006 and 2008

  17. Survey Content • Health Facility Data • Financials and Human resources • Lab test, equipment and medicine availability • Provider interview for competency (vignette) • 8-10 patient exit Interviews for prenatal process quality • Household survey • Socio-economics • Utilization • Health outcomes

  18. Health Facility Results • Did we isolate incentives effect? • Log expenditure between Tr and Phase II • Did randomization balance treatment/control groups? • Did utilization increase? • Did structural quality improve? • Did process quality improve? • Prenatal Care (PBF pays for this) • Child Curative Care (PBF does not pay for this)

  19. Log Expenditures • Randomization balanced baseline • Follow-up balanced, so difference in follow-up outcomes due to incentives not resources

  20. Baseline Balance • Utilization (PBF) • Structural Quality • Availability of staff, equipment & drugs needed to deliver care (PBF) • Little room to improve • Process Quality • Competency (Vignettes) • Process Quality (Patient exit survey)

  21. Baseline Expenditures & Staffing

  22. Prenatal Competency & Quality • Standardized vignette presented to provider • Unprompted responses for competency • Measure of ability/knowledge • Based on Rwandan Clinical Practice Guidelines • Process quality • Patient exit interview for process quality • Clinical content of care • Provider effort

  23. Quality Conceptual Framework Production Possibility Frontier What They Do: (Quality) What They Know (Ability/Technology)

  24. Returns to Training/Technology low (data from 12 countries) PPF What They Do Actual Performance Ability/Technology (More Training & Equip/Drugs )

  25. Goal: Use Pay for Performance to Close Productivity Gap PPF What They Do Productivity Gap Conditional on Ability Actual Performance Ability/Technology

  26. Prenatal Provider Competency & Quality

  27. Impact of PBF: Statistical methods • Have balance at baseline on all key outcomes • Use difference in differences analysis • Not a pure randomized experiment • Clustered at district year level • Facility Fixed Effects • Year dummy • Controls: age, parity, education, household size, health insurance, land, value of assets

  28. Baseline Prenatal Provider Competency & Quality

  29. Impact on Child Height • 0-11 months = +0.28*** • 24-47 months = +0.86***

  30. Results Summary • Balanced at baseline • Expenditures same, so isolate incentives • Impact on utilization • Delivery & Child prevention, but not prenatal • Impact on prenatal quality • Bigger for better doctors • Reduced child morbidity • Taller children

  31. Policy

More Related