Abstract

BackgroundImproving maternal health outcomes by reducing barriers to accessing maternal health services is a key goal for most developing countries. This paper analyses the effect of user fee removal, which was announced for rural areas of Zambia in April 2006, on the use of public health facilities for childbirth.MethodsData from the 2007 Zambia Demographic and Health Survey, including birth histories for the five years preceding the survey, is linked to administrative data and geo-referenced health facility census data. We exploit a difference-in-differences design, due to a differential change in user fees at the district level; fees were removed in 54 rural districts, but not in the 18 remaining urban districts. We use multilevel modelling to estimate the effect of this policy change, based on 4018 births from May 2002 to September 2007, covering a period before and after the policy announcement in April 2006.ResultsThe difference-in-difference estimates point to statistically insignificant changes in the proportion of women giving birth at home and in public facilities, but significant changes are found for deliveries in private (faith-based) facilities. Thus, the abolition of delivery fees is found to have some effect on where Zambian mothers choose to have their children born.ConclusionThe removal of user fees has not overcome barriers to the utilisation of delivery services at public facilities. User fee removal may also yield unintended consequences deterring the utilisation of delivery services. Therefore, abolishing user fees, alone, may not be sufficient to affect changes in utilisation; instead, other efforts, such as improving service quality, may have a greater impact.

Highlights

  • Improving maternal health outcomes by reducing barriers to accessing maternal health services is a key goal for most developing countries

  • Due to the complementarity between the types of pregnancy-related care and giving birth in a health care facility, the increase in antenatal visits could be related to the removal of user fees for childbirth

  • Main effects We find no evidence that user fee abolition in the 54 rural Zambia districts affected, on average, home or public facility deliveries, deliveries in faith-based facilities increased

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Summary

Introduction

Improving maternal health outcomes by reducing barriers to accessing maternal health services is a key goal for most developing countries. The same is true of costshifting; in the absence of user fees, women have been required to purchase supplies normally provided by a health facility (e.g., bleach, gloves and sanitary pads), when admitted for delivery services [17, 18], or arrange for their own food [18]. Omitting this information may give an incomplete picture of user fee effects, and lead to erroneous conclusions.

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