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Effective preventive treatments are not reaching the mothers and children who need them. One reason for this is lack of demand for these services. In parts of Latin America, families are being paid to be healthy and seek regular check-ups.
Results from Mexico and Nicaragua, where direct payments are made to poor families on condition that they keep up with preventive health measures, show a significant improvement in the coverage of services. But would the improvement be similar, or greater, if the money was invested in improving basic services? In 2000 the government of Honduras implemented a health programme that included a randomised trial to test this question.
The programme included activities designed to increase demand for preventive health care for pregnant women, new mothers and children under three years old. The study measured the rates of use of health care facilities, along with the proportion of women and children covered by immunisation and growth monitoring services.
Two sets of interventions were designed: one included direct payments for regular attendance at health checks (the household level package); the other was aimed at strengthening health services (the service level package). The programme was implemented and evaluated in 70 mountainous, rural municipalities with a total population of 660,000 people and the highest prevalence of malnutrition in the country.
Significant findings include:
The incentives tested produced a large increase in the coverage of some preventive health care services. Lessons for policy are:
Source(s):
‘Monetary incentives in primary health care and effects on use and
coverage of preventive care interventions in rural Honduras: cluster
randomised trial', The Lancet 364: 2030-2037, by S. Morris et al, 2004 Full document.
Funded by: Government of Honduras
id21 Research Highlight: 20 October 2005
Further Information:
Saul S. Morris
EMAD
Department for International Development
1 Palace Street
London SW1 5HE
UK
Tel:
+44 (0) 20 70231013
Fax:
+44 (0) 20 70230356
Contact the contributor: ifpriprafdc@hotmail.com
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