Abstract

—To reduce maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality, health care payers are experimenting with ways to better align incentives to promote high-quality maternal health services. This review examined 26 recent initiatives of health care payers in 16 low- and middle-income countries to pay for quality, and not solely quantity, of maternal health services. Payers measured quality by assessing availability of structural inputs (24 of 26 cases), adherence to processes (25 of 26 cases), and observation of key outputs of health facilities (14 of 26 cases). Two payers sought to also assess quality through observed patient outcomes. In 25 of the initiatives, payers used the quality assessment to adjust facility payments; in the remaining initiative, the payer used the quality assessment to adjust payments to provincial governments, which in turn pay facilities. The recent growth in such payment systems suggests more health care payers have identified ways to link quality measurement with provider payment mechanisms. Eleven impact evaluations of systems documented changes in provider behavior consistent with various elements of quality; however, only three evaluations reported effects on maternal or newborn morbidity and mortality and do not conclude whether the design or flaws in how it was implemented led to the results. Implementation fidelity—the degree to which the initiative was implemented as designed—was not widely addressed and is an area for future research. Furthermore, although payers in low- and middle-income countries have identified ways to operationalize a payment system that adjusts payments based on some measure of quality, the complexity and level of resources required to operationalize them raise concerns about sustainability.

Highlights

  • Use of facility-based maternity services has increased, maternal mortality in developing nations remains unacceptably high at 232.8 per 100,000 live births in 2013

  • This review examined 26 recent initiatives of health care payers in 16 low- and middle-income countries to pay for quality, and not solely quantity, of maternal health services

  • A 2013 study using data from 29 countries compared the burden of complications related to pregnancy with the coverage of key maternal health interventions in facilities and concluded that high coverage alone of essential maternal health interventions did not correlate with reduced maternal mortality if the interventions provided were of poor quality.[5]

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Summary

Introduction

Use of facility-based maternity services has increased, maternal mortality in developing nations remains unacceptably high at 232.8 per 100,000 live births in 2013. The majority of these deaths occur during labor, delivery, 78 Health Systems & Reform, Vol 4 (2018), No 2 and the immediate postpartum period, with obstetric hemorrhage being the main medical cause of death.[1] Maternal morbidities such as anemia, fistula, uterine rupture and scarring, and genital and uterine prolapse represent significant global burdens.[2]. To reduce maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality, high coverage of maternal health interventions needs to be matched with overall improvements in quality of maternal health care Health facilities and their staff play a key role in this effort. Multiple conceptual models of quality of care identify health workforce motivation and provider actions as key inputs to quality at the point of care.[14,15,16,17]

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