Abstract

With user fees now seen as a major hindrance to universal health coverage, many countries have introduced fee reduction or elimination policies, but there is growing evidence that adherence to reduced fees is often highly imperfect. In 2004, Kenya adopted a reduced and uniform user fee policy providing fee exemptions to many groups. We present data on user fee implementation, revenue and expenditure from a nationally representative survey of Kenyan primary health facilities. Data were collected from 248 randomly selected public health centres and dispensaries in 2010, comprising an interview with the health worker in charge, exit interviews with curative outpatients, and a financial record review. Adherence to user fee policy was assessed for eight tracer conditions based on health worker reports, and patients were asked about actual amounts paid. No facilities adhered fully to the user fee policy across all eight tracers, with adherence ranging from 62.2% for an adult with tuberculosis to 4.2% for an adult with malaria. Three quarters of exit interviewees had paid some fees, with a median payment of US dollars (USD) 0.39, and a quarter of interviewees were required to purchase additional medical supplies at a later stage from a private drug retailer. No consistent pattern of association was identified between facility characteristics and policy adherence. User fee revenues accounted for almost all facility cash income, with average revenue of USD 683 per facility per year. Fee revenue was mainly used to cover support staff, non-drug supplies and travel allowances. Adherence to user fee policy was very low, leading to concerns about the impact on access and the financial burden on households. However, the potential to ensure adherence was constrained by the facilities’ need for revenue to cover basic operating costs, highlighting the need for alternative funding strategies for peripheral health facilities.

Highlights

  • User fees have been widely used as a source of health facility financing in the developing world (Ridde and Morestin 2011)

  • About half of in-charges (47.9%) were female, this proportion was higher in municipal areas, at 75.3% and 66.7% in dispensaries and health centres, respectively

  • Adherence to the official user fee policy in Kenya’s public health centres and dispensaries was very low, with many patients paying for services that should have been free, others paying more than the specified amount, and few receiving waivers on the basis of poverty

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Summary

Introduction

User fees have been widely used as a source of health facility financing in the developing world (Ridde and Morestin 2011). In many African countries, fees were introduced in the 1980s with the aim of raising additional funds and curbing frivolous demand for health services (UNICEF 1989–1993). User fees have reduced demand for health services, especially among the poor, many countries have struggled to identify the poor for waivers, and expected improvements in quality of care have rarely materialized (Lagarde and Palmer 2008; McPake et al 2011; Ridde and Morestin 2011). User fees have been found to be inefficient in raising substantial revenues for health facilities (James et al 2006)

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