Abstract

Recognition is growing that development programs need to be guided by rights as well as to promote, protect, and fulfill them. Drawing from a content analysis of performance-based financing (PBF) implementation manuals, we quantify the extent to which these manuals use a rights perspective to frame family planning services. PBF is an adaptable service purchasing strategy that aims to improve equity and quality of health service provision. PBF can contribute toward achieving global family planning goals and has institutional support from multiple development partners including the Global Financing Facility in support of Every Woman Every Child. A review of 23 PBF implementation manuals finds that all documents are focused largely on the implementation of quality and accountability mechanisms, but few address issues of accessibility, availability, informed choice, acceptability, and/or nondiscrimination and equity. Notably, operational inclusion of agency, autonomy, empowerment, and/or voluntarism of health care clients is absent. Based on these findings, we argue that current PBF programs incorporate some mention of rights but are not systematically aligned with a rights-based approach. If PBF programs better reflected the importance of client-centered, rights-based programming, program performance could be improved and risk of infringing rights could be reduced. Given the mixed evidence for PBF benefits and the risk of perverse incentives in earlier PBF programs that were not aligned with rights-based approaches, we argue that greater attention to the rights principles of acceptability, accessibility, availability, and quality; accountability; agency and empowerment; equity and nondiscrimination; informed choice and decision making; participation; and privacy and confidentiality would improve health service delivery and health system performance for all stakeholders with clients at the center. Based on this review, we recommend making the rights-based approach explicit in PBF; progressively operationalizing rights, drawing from local experience; validating rights-based metrics to address measurement gaps; and recognizing the economic value of aligning PBF with rights principles. Such recommendations anchor an aspirational rights agenda with a practical PBF strategy on the need and opportunity for validated metrics.

Highlights

  • Global Health: Science and Practice 2019 | Volume 7 | Number 2 such, increasing access to voluntary family planning services is a global health goal, as demonstrated by the Sustainable Development Goals and Family Planning 2020.6–8 Performance-based financing (PBF) is a common approach to achieve global health goals, including family planning, because it aims to link efficient provision of high-quality health services with incentives

  • What Is Performance-Based Financing? Performance-based financing is an instrument through which payments are made to providers, health facilities, or local administrative units for health services conditional on the performance of predefined and verified quantity indicators, adjusted for measures of quality.[10]

  • Our review of rights principles contributes to this larger discourse by suggesting another dimension to consider for PBF programs—that is, the degree to which they systematically align with a rights-based approach

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Global Health: Science and Practice 2019 | Volume 7 | Number 2 such, increasing access to voluntary family planning services is a global health goal, as demonstrated by the Sustainable Development Goals and Family Planning 2020.6–8 Performance-based financing (PBF) is a common approach to achieve global health goals, including family planning, because it aims to link efficient provision of high-quality health services with incentives. This approach is one of several financial strategies of the Global Financing Facility (GFF) in support of Every Woman Every Child, the new flagship mechanism for reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health in 63 high-burden low- and middle-income countries[9] (Box). Our review of rights principles contributes to this larger discourse by suggesting another dimension to consider for PBF programs—that is, the degree to which they systematically align with a rights-based approach

A REVIEW OF RIGHTS IN PBF OPERATIONS MANUALS
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