Economics and Ethics of Results-Based Financing for Family Planning : Evidence and Policy Implications
Keywords
QUALITY OF SERVICESRURAL WOMEN
QUALITY SERVICES
APPROACH TO WOMEN
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
MODERN FAMILY PLANNING
PREGNANT WOMEN
COMMISSION ON POPULATION
NATIONAL POPULATION
CONTRACEPTIVE CHOICES
MORTALITY
SOCIAL MARKETING
NEWBORNS
NUTRITION
HEALTH RESULTS
MEDICAL CARE
INTERNATIONAL ACTION
BIRTH RATE
STATE GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC HEALTH
SPOUSES
LOWER FERTILITY
QUALITY OF CARE
SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS
FERTILITY
MATERNAL HEALTH
HEALTH SECTOR
INSURANCE
COMPREHENSIVE REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
NUMBER OF COUPLES
SMALLER FAMILIES
PRENATAL CARE
HEALTH SERVICES
IUD
ABORTION
EQUAL ACCESS
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON POPULATION
VASECTOMY
HEALTH CARE
SMALL FAMILIES
SCREENING
HOSPITAL
POPULATION RESEARCH CENTRE
DRUGS
FERTILITY RATES
HEALTH SERVICE
SPOUSE
TRANSPORTATION
SEX
RESPECT
PROVISION OF SERVICES
DEMOGRAPHIC GOALS
NATURAL RESOURCES
INFORMED CHOICE
LARGE FAMILIES
METHOD OF CHOICE
FAMILY PLANNING
POLICY MAKERS
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
EARTHQUAKE
FERTILITY DECLINE
PENSIONS
TRAINING HEALTH WORKERS
HEALTH INDICATORS
MODERN CONTRACEPTION
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
NUMBER OF WOMEN
ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS
POPULATION POLICIES
HIGH FERTILITY
CONTRACEPTIVE USE
HEALTH RISKS
BIRTH RATES
PREGNANCIES
CHILDBIRTH
SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES
FOOD SUPPLIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
SERVICE PROVIDERS
CHANGES IN FERTILITY
LACK OF KNOWLEDGE
PANDEMIC
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
AGGRESSIVE
PATIENTS
HEALTH ECONOMICS
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
LIVE BIRTHS
COUNSELING
CONTRACEPTIVE ACCEPTORS
ADOLESCENTS
STERILIZATION
LACK OF INFORMATION
HEALTH SPECIALIST
IMPACT EVALUATIONS
CHILD HEALTH
MATERNAL HEALTH CARE
DEMOGRAPHERS
HIV/AIDS
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
CHILD SURVIVAL
COMMUNITY HEALTH
PRICE SUBSIDIES
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH PROGRAM
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
INTERNATIONAL FAMILY PLANNING
FERTILITY RATE
PACE OF POPULATION GROWTH
SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
INJECTABLE CONTRACEPTIVES
POPULATION RESEARCH
FAMILY WELFARE
MARRIED WOMEN
GENDER EQUITY
MATERNAL DEATHS
MEDICAL ETHICS
MODERN CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS
HEALTH SYSTEM
FAMILIES
INFANTS
URBAN AREAS
EMPLOYMENT
QUALITY ASSURANCE
OUTPATIENT CARE
CONDOMS
CONSUMERS
FERTILITY DECLINES
SUPPLY CURVES
REDUCING MATERNAL MORTALITY
FAMILY SIZE
FEMALE STERILIZATION
HEALTH CARE COVERAGE
SUBSTANCE ABUSE
PRODUCTION COSTS
HEALTH FACILITIES
POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
RELIGIOUS REASONS
METHODS OF FAMILY PLANNING
SMOKING
HEALTH CARE SERVICES
INFORMED CHOICES
UNINTENDED PREGNANCIES
CLASSICAL ECONOMICS
IMMUNIZATIONS
FORCED ABORTION
BABIES
INTEGRATION
HEALTH PROVIDERS
DECISION MAKING
COERCION
PATIENT
MODERN FAMILY PLANNING METHODS
HEALTH EFFECTS
CHILD MORTALITY
POPULATION GROWTH
PREGNANCY
DEPARTMENT OF POPULATION
HEALTH POLICY
SERVICE DELIVERY
FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMS
ESSENTIAL HEALTH SERVICES
PAMPHLET
SOCIAL COMPENSATION
HEALTH CENTERS
SAFE MOTHERHOOD
SEXUALLY ACTIVE
HUMAN RESOURCES
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
ILLNESS
INFORMATION SERVICES
QUALITY CARE
FREE CHOICE
EXPENDITURES
UNSAFE ABORTIONS
SIDE EFFECTS
HUMAN RIGHTS
HEALTH WORKERS
HUMAN CAPITAL
HEALTH EDUCATION
MATERNITY LEAVE
CAPITATION
POPULATION CONTROL
HIV
ORAL CONTRACEPTIVES
HEALTH INVESTMENTS
MEDICAL SPECIALISTS
PATIENT SATISFACTION
HOSPITALS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
SOCIAL REASONS
COMPLICATIONS
FAMILY PLANNING SERVICES
MEDICAL RECORDS
WORKERS
IUDS
MATERNAL MORTALITY RATIO
EXTENDED FAMILIES
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
CHILDREN PER WOMAN
CONTRACEPTIVE PREVALENCE
POSTERS
DEMAND CURVE
ABSTINENCE
HEALTH CARE POLICY
SUPPLY CURVE
MODERN FAMILY
INFORMED DECISIONS
HEALTH CARE WORKERS
PARENTHOOD FEDERATION
MINISTRY OF HEALTH
IMPACT ON HEALTH
CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS
CITIES
MEDICAL TREATMENT
HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS
FATIGUE
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17564Abstract
This paper was developed for World Bank task team leaders (TTLs) and teams designing results-based financing (RBF) programs in family planning (FP). It explores the rationale for introducing such incentives based on insights from classical and behavioral economics, to respond to supply- and demand-side barriers to using FP services. To help the reader understand why incentivizing FP requires specific attention in RBF, the evolution of incentives in vertical FP programs introduced from the 1950s to the early 1990s and the ethical concerns raised in these programs are described. RBF programs after the 1990s were also studied to understand the ways FP is currently incentivized. The paper also touches on the effects of the incentive programs for FP as described in the literature. Finally, it examines ethical concerns related to FP incentives that should be considered during the design, implementation, and evaluation of programs and provides a conceptual framework that can be of use for task teams in the decision making process for FP in RBF programs. It should be noted that the paper is concerned exclusively with developing a framework that can help design ethical programs to address the unmet need for FP.Date
2014-04-01Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/17564http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17564
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
The Potential for Integrating Community-Based Nutrition and Postpartum Family Planning : Review of Evidence and Experience in Low-Income SettingsAlvesson, Helle M.; Mulder-Sibanda, Menno (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2014-04-16)The objective of this review was to
 study where community-based family planning and nutrition
 programs have been integrated, how this has been
 accomplished, and what the results have been. Although
 family planning is a nontraditional intervention in
 community-based nutrition programs, it can have profound
 effects on maternal and child health and nutrition. When
 family planning does not occur, short intervals between
 pregnancies deplete mothers' reserves of nutrients
 needed for pregnancy and later for breastfeeding. As a
 result, short birth intervals are associated with higher
 maternal and neonatal mortality and malnutrition rates of
 infants. Family planning, which promotes contraceptive use
 and the lactational amenorrhea method, can thus improve
 nutrition outcomes in both mothers and babies. The authors
 identified a few studies on integrated services in the
 published literature; thus the main part of the review is
 built on operational research studies and unpublished
 smaller scale intervention studies. However, the controlled
 studies that were identified indicate positive correlation
 between breastfeeding levels and increased contraception
 use. Additionally, although the design of the intervention
 studies did not make it possible to assess the degree to
 which integration had an impact, the studies did highlight
 factors that were key to a successful integration process.
 These are community engagement; multiple and frequent
 contact points between mothers, community volunteers, and
 health workers; involvement of husbands; moving
 implementation decisions closer to the users of the program;
 and assuring transparency, clarity, and simplicity in the
 transmission of development objectives to communities.
-
Fertility Decline in the Islamic Republic of Iran 1980-2006World Bank (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2017-06-30)Despite its volatile history, the
 Islamic Republic of Iran has performed well on social
 indicators, especially in providing basic services such as
 health care and education. Iran's fertility decline may
 have proceeded in two stages, the first beginning in the
 late 1960s. The Iranian government introduced a family
 planning program during the 1960s with explicit health and
 demographic objectives. Between 1967 and 1977, fertility
 declined-mainly in urban areas-to an average of 4 children
 per woman. Although the family planning program continued
 after the 1979 Islamic revolution, it was suspended after
 war broke out with Iraq in 1980. During the war, the
 government pursued a pronatalist population policy,
 including incentives for childbearing. The fertility decline
 coincided with improvements in primary and secondary
 education, possibly affecting the rapid decline in
 adolescent fertility during 1997-2006, especially when
 compared to other Middle East and North Africa region
 countries. Today regional disparities in fertility exist
 with higher fertility in less developed districts. Yet
 Iran's example shows how good public policy
 interventions in health (including family planning) and
 education can reduce fertility and contribute to human development.
-
"...and then she died" : Indonesia Maternal Health AssessmentWorld Bank (World Bank, 2010-02-01)Maternal health remains one of the top priorities of the Government of Indonesia (GoI) and the Ministry of Health (MoH) because reductions in maternal mortality have been slows. The current Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) for Indonesia is 228 but with existing programs and interventions the government does not believe it will be able to achieve its stated millennium development goal of 102 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births by 2015. There are positive trends in an increased use of skilled birth attendants, almost universal access to some level of antenatal care and continued use of family planning but these are not enough to stem the tide of maternal death. Interventions by the skilled birth attendants in many cases are not in line with existing standards and prove to be ineffective in trying to address the emergence of complications. Antenatal care is important, but it is not where gains in decreased mortality will be obtained. The continued use of traditional birth attendants (TBA) and delivering at home are contributory factors to maternal mortality in Indonesia. In collecting data from verbal autopsies in three districts, (a widely used government initiative to determine the causes of maternal death) 63 out of 76 deaths occurred in home births that had been assisted by a TBA. In order to improve the access of the poor and the near poor to health services, the government is implementing the social insurance scheme, Jamkesmas. Approximately 104 million people should qualify for assistance but there are presently only 76.4 million people covered by this social health insurance (SHI) plan. Even those who are covered are not always able to afford care because of external expenses such as transportation charges which must be paid up front.