Effectiveness of a pay-for-performance intervention to improve maternal and child health services in Afghanistan: A cluster-randomized trial

Cyrus Y. Engineer, Elina Dale, Anubhav Agarwal, Arunika Agarwal, Olakunle Alonge, Anbrasi Edward, Shivam Gupta, Holly B. Schuh, Gilbert Burnham, David H. Peters

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: A cluster randomized trial of a pay-for-performance (P4P) scheme was implemented in Afghanistan to test whether P4P could improve maternal and child (MCH) services. Methods: All 442 primary care facilities in 11 provinces were matched by type of facility and outpatient volume, and randomly assigned to the P4P or comparison arm. P4P facilities were given bonus payments based on the MCH services provided. An endline household sample survey was conducted in 72 randomly selected matched pair catchment areas (3421 P4P households; 3427 comparison). The quality of services was assessed in 81 randomly sampled matched pairs of facilities. Data collectors and households were blinded to the intervention assignment. MCH outcomes were assessed at the cluster level. Results: There were no substantial differences in any of the five MCH coverage indicators (P4P vs comparison): Modern contraception(10.7% vs 11.2% (P = 0.90); antenatal care: 56.2% vs 55.6% (P = 0.94); skilled birth attendance (33.9% vs 28.5%, P = 0.17); postnatal care (31.2% vs 30.3%, P = 0.98); and childhood pentavalent3 vaccination (49.6 vs 52.3%, P = 0.41), or in the equity measures. There were substantial increases in the quality of history and physical examinations index (P = 0.01); client counselling index (P = 0.01); and time spent with patients (P = 0.05). Health workers reported limited understanding about the bonuses. Conclusions: The intervention had minimal effect, possibly due to difficulties communicating with health workers and inattention to demand-side factors. P4P interventions need to consider management and community demand issues.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)451-459
Number of pages9
JournalInternational journal of epidemiology
Volume45
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 11 2016

Keywords

  • Cluster-randomized trial
  • Health worker motivation
  • Incentives
  • Maternal and child health
  • Pay-for-performance
  • Performance based financing

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Epidemiology

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