Abstract

Background: Conditional cash transfers (CCTs) are interventions which provide assistance in the form of cash to specific vulnerable groups on the condition that they meet pre-defined requirements. The impact of conditional cash transfers on children's access to health services and on their overall health has not been established in sub-Saharan Africa.Method: We conducted a systematic review aimed at summarising the available information on the impact of conditional cash transfers on health service utilisation and child health in sub-Saharan Africa. We searched databases for peer-reviewed articles, websites of organisations involved in implementing conditional cash transfer programmes, and Google scholar to identify grey literature. Records were selected based on predefined eligibility criteria which were drawn from a programme impact framework. Records were eligible if one of the following outcomes was evaluated: health services utilisation, immunisation coverage, growth monitoring, anthropometry, illness reported, and mortality. Other records which reported on important intermediate outcomes or described mechanisms significantly contributing to impact were also included in the review. Data items were extracted from eligible records into an extraction form based on predefined data items. Study quality indicators were also extracted into a quality assessment form.Results: Thematic narrative synthesis was conducted using data from nine included records. The review included five cluster randomised evaluations, one quasi-experimental clustered study, one randomised trial at the individual level, one mixed-method study and one purely qualitative study. There was insufficient evidence of an impact of conditional cash transfers on health service utilisation. There was also not enough evidence of an impact on nutritional status. No impact was observed on health status based on illness reports, nor on immunisation rates. None of the included records evaluated the impact on childhood mortality.Conclusions: The findings of this review suggest that a positive impact may be observed in health service utilisation and nutrition, however, this may not translate into improved child health. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms and pathways by which these interventions work, explore the effect of contextual factors on their impact, and assess their cost implication especially within resource-constrained settings.

Highlights

  • Cash transfers are defined as the provision of assistance in the form of cash with the objective of increasing the household’s real income [1]

  • The studies included in this review reported on the following quantitative outcomes: immunisation rates (n = 3), health centre attendance (n = 3), illness or ill days preceding the survey (n = 3), nutritional status [n = 3, measured as weight, height, height-forage z-score (HAZ), weight-for-age z-score (WAZ), weight-forheight z-score (WHZ), and mid-arm circumference (MUAC)], dietary intake (n = 1, measured as frequency and diversity from 24-h recall from care-givers, mothers’ knowledge on health and nutrition (n = 1), and early infant intervention in HIV/AIDS (n = 1)

  • This review aimed to investigate the effect of Conditional cash transfers (CCTs) on utilisation of health services, and on health status

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Summary

Introduction

Cash transfers are defined as the provision of assistance in the form of cash with the objective of increasing the household’s real income [1]. Much of the evidence on the impact of CCTs comes from earlier programs in Latin America [1], the Caribbean [3] and parts of Asia [4, 5] These early impact evaluations suggest that CCTs, may have a positive impact on the diet of children from poor households and improve their nutritional status [2, 5,6,7,8,9,10], on attendance at routine clinical visits [7, 9, 11,12,13,14], on the uptake of routine childhood immunisation [4, 9, 11, 13], and, in the long term, on child health [7, 15]. The impact of conditional cash transfers on children’s access to health services and on their overall health has not been established in sub-Saharan Africa

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