Long-term effects of payment for performance on maternal and child health outcomes: evidence from Tanzania.

Josephine Borghi ORCID logo; Peter Binyaruka ORCID logo; IddyMayumana; SiriLange; VincentSomville; OttarMaestad; (2021) Long-term effects of payment for performance on maternal and child health outcomes: evidence from Tanzania. BMJ global health, 6 (12). e006409-e006409. ISSN 2059-7908 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006409
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BACKGROUND: The success of payment for performance (P4P) schemes relies on their ability to generate sustainable changes in the behaviour of healthcare providers. This paper examines short-term and longer-term effects of P4P in Tanzania and the reasons for these changes. METHODS: We conducted a controlled before and after study and an embedded process evaluation. Three rounds of facility, patient and household survey data (at baseline, after 13 months and at 36 months) measured programme effects in seven intervention districts and four comparison districts. We used linear difference-in-difference regression analysis to determine programme effects, and differential effects over time. Four rounds of qualitative data examined evolution in programme design, implementation and mechanisms of change. RESULTS: Programme effects on the rate of institutional deliveries and antimalarial treatment during antenatal care reduced overtime, with stock out rates of antimalarials increasing over time to baseline levels. P4P led to sustained improvements in kindness during deliveries, with a wider set of improvements in patient experience of care in the longer term. A change in programme management and funding delayed incentive payments affecting performance on some indicators. The verification system became more integrated within routine systems over time, reducing the time burden on managers and health workers. Ongoing financial autonomy and supervision sustained motivational effects in those aspects of care giving not reliant on funding. CONCLUSION: Our study adds to limited and mixed evidence documenting how P4P effects evolve over time. Our findings highlight the importance of undertaking ongoing assessment of effects over time.



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