Abstract

Microfinance is the provision of financial services for the poor. Health program through microfinance has the potential to address several access barriers to health. We report the design and baseline findings of a multi-site non-randomized evaluation of the effect of a health program on the members of two microfinance organizations from Karnataka and Gujarat states of India. Villages identified for roll-out of health services with microfinance were pair-matched with microfinance only villages. A quantitative survey at inception and twelve months post health intervention compare the primary outcome (incidence of childhood diarrhea), and secondary outcome (place of last delivery, toilet at home, and out-of-pocket expenditure on treatment). At baseline, the intervention and comparison communities were similar except for out-of-pocket expenditure on health. Low reported use of toilet at home indicates the areas are heading towards a sanitation crisis. This should be an area of program priority for the microfinance organizations. While respondents primarily rely on their savings for meeting treatment expenditure, borrowing from friends, relatives, and money-lenders remains other important source of meeting treatment expenditure in the community. Programs need to prioritize steps to ensure awareness about national health insurance schemes, entitlement to increase service utilization, and developing additional health financing safety nets for financing outpatient care, that are responsible for majority of health-debt. Finally we discuss implications of such programs for national policy makers.

Highlights

  • Poor health contributes to the persistent incidence of high poverty levels in India, with health expenditures driving 39 million families into poverty each year (Selvaraj & Karan, 2009)

  • We report the design and baseline findings of a multi-site non-randomized evaluation of the effect of a health program on the members of two microfinance organizations from Karnataka and Gujarat states of India

  • Villages identified for roll-out of health services with microfinance were pair-matched with microfinance only villages

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Summary

Introduction

Poor health contributes to the persistent incidence of high poverty levels in India, with health expenditures driving 39 million families into poverty each year (Selvaraj & Karan, 2009). While the Government of India is poised to radically increase its share of the overall health spending (from 1.4 to 2.5 percent of gross domestic product) in its twelfth five-year plan (2012-17), and move towards providing universal health coverage for its citizens, addressing high out-of-pocket expenditure on treatment — which accounts for more than three-quarters of health spending in India (Balarajan, Selvaraj, & Subramanian, 2011) — remains a challenge. While women share a disproportionate burden of illness in India, many of them are small-scale entrepreneurs, and organized around microfinance. Transactions are structured so that the clients, usually women, organize together, mostly as Self Help Groups (SHG), to repay loans and deposit savings. The group solidarity generated as a result of womens’ participation in microfinance generates social capital

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