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Investigating Financial Incentives for Maternal Health: An Introduction
Stanton, Mary Ellen; Higgs, Elizabeth S. & Koblinsky, Marge
Abstract
Projection of current trends in maternal and neonatal mortality reduction shows that many countries will
fall short of the UN Millennium Development Goal 4 and 5. Underutilization of maternal health services
contributes to this poor progress toward reducing maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Moreover,
the quality of services continues to lag in many countries, with a negative effect on the health of
women and their babies, including deterring women from seeking care. To enhance the use and provision
of quality maternal care, countries and donors are increasingly using financial incentives. This paper introduces
the JHPN Supplement, in which each paper reviews the evidence of the effectiveness of a specific
financial incentive instrument with the aim of improving the use and quality of maternal healthcare and
impact. The US Agency for International Development and the US National Institutes of Health convened
a US Government Evidence Summit on Enhancing Provision and Use of Maternal Health Services through
Financial Incentives on 24-25 April 2012 in Washington, DC. The Summit brought together leading global
experts in finance, maternal health, and health systems from governments, academia, development
organizations, and foundations to assess the evidence on whether financial incentives significantly and
substantially increase provision, use and quality of maternal health services, and the contextual factors
that impact the effectiveness of these incentives. Evidence review teams evaluated the multidisciplinary
evidence of various financial mechanisms, including supply-side incentives (e.g. performance-based financing,
user fees, and various insurance mechanisms) and demand-side incentives (e.g. conditional cash
transfers, vouchers, user fee exemptions, and subsidies for care-seeking). At the Summit, the teams presented
a synthesis of evidence and initial recommendations on practice, policy, and research for discussion.
The Summit enabled structured feedback on recommendations which the teams included in their final
papers appearing in this Supplement. Papers in this Supplement review the evidence for a specific financial
incentive mechanism (e.g. pay for performance, conditional cash transfer) to improve the use and quality
of maternal healthcare and makes recommendations for programmes and future research. While data on
programmes using financial incentives for improved use and indications of the quality of maternal health
services support specific conclusions and recommendations, including those for future research, data linking
the use of financial incentives with improved health outcomes are minimal.
Keywords
Health services research; Maternal health services; Maternal welfare/economics; Pregnancy; Programme evaluation
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