11 Isolating the incentive effect PBF  Performance incentives  Additional resources Compensate control facilities with equal resources  Average of what.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Partnerships for Health Reform Utilization and Expenditures on Outpatient Health Care by HIV Positive Individuals in Rwanda PHR Rwanda - Abt Associates.
Advertisements

TB/HIV Research Priorities in Resource- Limited Settings Where we are now and some suggestions for where to go Paul Nunn February 2005.
Scaling up Family Planning through Performance-Based Financing in Rwanda Dr. Louis Rusa, Director PBF support Cell Ministry of Health, Rwanda.
Characteristics of research. Designed to derive generalisable new knowledge.
PEPFAR’s Approach to Maximize Efficiency, Effectiveness and Impact
Based on the paper by Kirrin Gill, Rohini Pande, and Anju Malhotra International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) Women Deliver for Development Photo.
Changing Policy- Rwanda's change in guidelines African Regional meeting on interventions for Impact in essential obstetrics and new born care Addis Ababa.
Unmet need for family planning and low rates of dual method protection among men and women attending HIV care and treatment services in Kenya, Namibia.
Group Work 2 Lessons Learned in Social Protection in Health Group No. 9 Facilitator: Elly Van Kanten.
Tathmini GBV: Evaluating Comprehensive Gender-Based Violence Program Scale-up in Tanzania Susan Settergren Futures Group.
Hospital Accreditation Setting Standards
Possible solution: Change testing & care for patients in TB treatment Old system TB patient treated at TB center Referred to VCT center for HIV testing.
Moving towards the goal of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in Bangladesh Md. Ashadul Islam Director General Health Economics Unit Ministry of Health and.
Evaluation of Math-Science Partnership Projects (or how to find out if you’re really getting your money’s worth)
Paying Health Care Providers for Performance: Evidence from Rwanda Paul Gertler UC Berkeley January 2009.
Performance-Based Financing in Rwanda
Access to health care, social protection, and household costs of illness proposal Cost of illness working group INDEPTH AGM 2009, Pune.
Performance Monitoring and Financial Reports Performance Monitoring and Financial Reports UNAIDS and Unified Budget and Workplan (UBW)
RWANDA PERFORMANCE BASED SYSTEM: PUBLIC REFORMS Claude SEKABARAGA, MD, MPH Director policy, planning and capacity building Ministry of Health October 2008.
Preparation the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey Presented By: Kyaw Nan Da Myanmar.
1 Influence of PBF Indicators on Health Coverage Kathy Kantengwa M.D, MPA; PBF advisor, MSH Montreux, November 2010 Rwanda IHSS Project.
February 2010 Petra Vergeer, Health Specialist RBF Team, World Bank At a glance… Verification of performance linked to financial incentives by Joe Naimoli.
Budget Hearings: Social Development Committee By Macharia Kamau Representative, UNICEF South Africa 28 February 2007.
1 African Development Bank Agnes Soucat, MD, Ph.D Director Department of Human Development African Development Bank Agnes Soucat, MD, Ph.D Director Department.
PRIORITY SETTING PROCESS ON NUTRITION AND USE OF GUIDELINES IN RESOURCE ALLOCATION IN ARUSHA DISTRICT COUNCIL Temina Mkumbwa MPH-Executive Track 22 nd.
Closing the Indigenous health gap & evaluation: getting it right and making an impact Professor Ian Anderson.
RBF through the Public Health Sector in Low-Income Countries Essential Design Elements for a Health Center RBF model György Fritsche HDNHE RBF Seminar.
Participants Adoption Study 109 (83%) of 133 WSU Cooperative Extension county chairs, faculty, and program staff responded to survey Dissemination & Implementation.
Unit 10. Monitoring and evaluation
Performances Based Financing scheme in Rwanda INVESTING MORE STRATEGICALLY 1.
The Impact of Performance-Based Financing on the Cost of Health Services in Rwanda First Global Symposium on Health Systems Research Montreux, November.
Evaluation of a web-based educational model to improve nurse recognition of delirium: An RCT McCrow J 1, Beattie E 1, Sullivan K.A. 1, Fick D 2 & Park.
Political Commitment for Family Planning in Rwanda
Linked NHA Tables-Examples Background The National Health Accounts (NHA) is a standardized methodology that describes flow of funds through the health.
Problem Statement: In Kenya, despite the development of national standard treatment guidelines (STGs) for the management of acute respiratory infections.
M&E Basics Miguel Aragon Lopez, MD, MPH. UNAIDS M&E Senior Adviser 12 th May 2009.
Monitoring UA 2010 in health sector 1 |1 | Monitoring progress towards Universal Access 2010 in the health sector Kevin M De Cock Ties Boerma.
Occupational Health. Occupational Medicine Recognized Specialty Since 1949 Combines Clinical Skills With Toxicology, Epidemiology, Safety, Rehabilitation,
2015 EAST AFRICA EVIDENCE SUMMIT JULY 8-9, 2015 | NAIROBI, KENYA COMMUNITY PERFORMANCE-BASED FINANCING IMPACT EVALUATION DISSEMINATION MEETING JEANINE.
Evaluating Pay for Performance in Health Provincial Maternal -Child Health Investment Project in Argentina Sebastian Martinez HDNVP Presentation joint.
IMPACT EVALUATION OF PERFORMANCE BASED CONTRACTING FOR A collaboration between the Ministry of Health, CNLS, SPH, INSP-Mexico and World Bank GENERAL HEALTH.
Paulin Basinga Rwanda School of Public Health A collaboration between the Rwanda Ministry of Health, CNLS, SPH, INSP Mexico, UC Berkeley and the World.
PERFORMANCE BASED FINANCING FOR HEALTH IN RWANDA Dr RUSA U. Louis Ministry of Health Kigali-Rwanda Montreux 16th- 19th.
Paulin Basinga Rwanda School of Public Health Christel Vermeersch World Bank A collaboration between the Rwanda Ministry of Health, CNLS, SPH, INSP Mexico,
Nigeria, January 2010 Petra Vergeer Health Specialist, RBF Team.
What PBF can achieve; Example from Rwanda Claude SEKABARAGA, MD, MPH World Bank, Nairobi Hub. January 2010.
Institute for International Programs An international evaluation consortium Institute for International Programs An international evaluation consortium.
International Health Policy Program -Thailand NHA TEAM International Health Policy Program Draft report presentation for external peer review October 7,
Africa Regional Meeting on Interventions for Impact in EmOC Feb 2011, Addis Ababa Maternal and Newborn Health in the African Region Africa Regional.
Sara Lovell, CPCS Education Coordinator Providence Alaska Medical Center.
MDG 4 Target: Reduce by two- thirds, between 1990 & 2015, the mortality rate of children under five years.
Reducing Health Disparities Through Research & Translation Programs Francis D. Chesley, Jr., M.D. Francis D. Chesley, Jr., M.D. Director, Office of Extramural.
ABSTRACT THE CHALLENGE OF INTEGRATING A RDU TRAINING MODEL INTO THE REALITY OF A HEALTH SYSTEM CONTEXT Problem Statement: The Dar es Salaam Urban Health.
Targeting of Public Spending Menno Pradhan Senior Poverty Economist The World Bank office, Jakarta.
DR ANGELA MUSHAVI NATIONAL PMTCT AND PEDIATRIC HIV CARE AND TREATMENT COORDINATOR, ZIM 19/07/2011 IAS 2011: ITALY, ROME Operations Research from a Policy.
Financing for Reproductive, Mother, Newborn, Child, and Adolescent Health for UHC ACCELERATING PROGRESS ON EARLY ESSENTIAL NEWBORN CARE September,
CCO OREGON ROUND TABLE HEALTH METRICS AND OUTCOMES AMIT SHAH, MD.
Recap of Day 1 June 11, 2007 Africa Region Consultation on Multisectoral Response.
1 CHRONIC CONDITION SELF-MANAGEMENT FLINDERS HUMAN BEHAVIOUR & HEALTH RESEARCH UNIT THE FLINDERS MODEL.
Introduction to Monitoring and Evaluation. Learning Objectives By the end of the session, participants will be able to: Define program components Define.
HHS/CDC Track 1.0 Transition in Rwanda Dr Ida Kankindi, Rwanda Ministry of Health Dr Felix Kayigamba, CDC-Rwanda August
Endris Mohammed Seid 1,2, Arjanne Rietsema 1 1: CORDAID-Zimbabwe 2: Ministry of Health and Child Care- Zimbabwe Improving Maternal, Neonatal and Child.
IMPACT EVALUATION OF PERFORMANCE BASED CONTRACTING FOR A collaboration between the Ministry of Health, CNLS, SPH, INSP-Mexico and World Bank GENERAL HEALTH.
Quality Improvement An Introduction
Monitoring and Evaluation: A Review of Terms
What do we know and don’t know…
Paulin BASINGA Senior Program Officer Global Health Program, HIV
Research Clinical Audit Service Evaluation
The impact of performance-based financing on the delivery of HIV testing, prevention of mother to child transmission and antiretroviral delivery in the.
The impact of performance-based financing on the delivery of HIV testing, prevention of mother to child transmission and antiretroviral delivery in the.
Presentation transcript:

11 Isolating the incentive effect PBF  Performance incentives  Additional resources Compensate control facilities with equal resources  Average of what treatments receive  Not linked to performance  Money allocated by the health center management

22 Sample: Panel 165 Facilities households in catchment areas  Random sample of 14 per clinic

33 Log Expenditures Randomization balanced baseline Follow-up balanced, so difference in follow- up outcomes due to incentives not resources

4 Rates of Assisted deliveries increased in both treatment and control groups A dramatic increase of utilization of services in Rwanda

55

66 6 Delivery at the health facility increased overall in Rwanda, but 7% more in PBF facilities ….

77

88

99 Quality Conceptual Framework What They Know (Ability/Technology) What They Do: (Quality) Production Possibility Frontier

10 Goal: Use Pay for Performance to Close Productivity Gap Ability/Technology What They Do Production Possibility Frontier Productivity Gap Conditional on Ability Actual Performance

11 Prenatal Competency & Quality Provider knowledge/competency  Standardized vignette presented to provider  Compare answers to Rwandan CPG  Measure of ability/knowledge Process quality  Patient exit interview of clinical services provided  Clinical content of care  Provider effort

12 In the last years, PBF has increased prenatal care quality significantly …

13

14

15 Results Summary Balanced at baseline Expenditures same, so isolate incentives Impact on utilization  Delivery & Child prevention, but not prenatal Impact on prenatal quality  Bigger for better doctors Reduced child morbidity & Taller children Effect sizes bigger than most other interventions

16 Discussion Rwanda is back on track towards the health MDGs because of many different factors including  Strong political leadership  Micro-Insurance (Mutuelles)  Autonomy and Fiscal Decentralization (Imihigo)  HIV services and earmarked funding PBF effect seen despite many other national level intervention: possible bigger effect in other countries 16

17 Beware the “pre-post trap”: the example of Family Planning in Rwanda

18 Conclusions Reaching the MDGs –or at least making a major dent towards reaching them- is possible even within the next five years.. Results Based financing can be a powerful way to address the problems of the “missing middle” and inject incentives into the implementation “black box” Only because of the rigorous impact evaluation conducted in Rwanda can we conclude that RBF played a role in the increased utilization of services Impact E valuation should systematically be nested into major policy interventions