基于服务和人口的豁免:这些是低收入国家卫生筹资公平和效率的前进方向吗?

S. Witter
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引用次数: 35

摘要

目的第一波豁免政策的经验表明,出于现实和政治经济原因,基于贫困的个人定向豁免效果不佳。对此,许多国家近年来改变了做法——在保持用户收费作为设施必要收入来源的同时,它们已转向分类定向,根据高优先级服务或人口群体提供豁免。本章旨在审查这种最近的卫生融资模式的影响和有效性的条件。方法/方法本章基于文献综述和对西非(加纳和塞内加尔)分娩护理国家收费减免政策的两项复杂评估的数据。制定和使用了一个分析豁免政策影响的概念框架。虽然分析的重点是交付的豁免,但框架和调查结果可能可推广到其他基于服务或人口的豁免。本章介绍了送货豁免的性质、其使用的驱动因素、其规模和低收入国家的共同模式的背景信息。然后,它会研究它们对利用、护理质量和公平性的影响的证据,并调查它们的成本效益。最后一节介绍了关于执行和对决策者的影响的经验教训,包括豁免的可接受性和可持续性,以及如何将其与其他可能的机制进行比较。本章的结论是,资助的基于服务或群体的豁免为减轻低收入国家卫生系统中的不公平和低效率提供了一条简单而潜在有效的途径。然而,有一些关键的限制。一是卫生设施一级资源的可替代性。第二是难以在中长期内维持单独的资金流。第三是选择高优先级服务豁免的任意依据。因此,本章的结论是,这种融资模式是不稳定的,很可能是过渡性的。
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Service- and population-based exemptions: are these the way forward for equity and efficiency in health financing in low-income countries?
OBJECTIVE The first wave of experiences of exemptions policies suggested that poverty-based exemptions, using individual targeting, were not effective, for practical and political economic reasons. In response, many countries have changed their approach in recent years--while maintaining user fees as a necessary source of revenue for facilities, they have been switching to categorical targeting, offering exemptions based on high-priority services or population groups. This chapter aims to examine the impact and conditions for effectiveness of this recent health finance modality. METHODOLOGY/APPROACH The chapter is based on a literature review and on data from two complex evaluations of national fee exemption policies for delivery care in West Africa (Ghana and Senegal). A conceptual framework for analysing the impact of exemption policies is developed and used. Although the analysis focuses on exemption for deliveries, the framework and findings are likely to be generalisable to other service- or population-based exemptions. FINDINGS The chapter presents background information on the nature of delivery exemptions, the drivers for their use, their scale and common modalities in low-income countries. It then looks at evidence of their impact, on utilisation, quality of care and equity and investigates their cost-effectiveness. The final section presents lessons on implementation and implications for policy-makers, including the acceptability and sustainability of exemptions and how they compare to other possible mechanisms. IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY The chapter concludes that funded service- or group-based exemptions offer a simple, potentially effective route to mitigating inequity and inefficiency in the health systems of low-income countries. However, there are a number of key constraints. One is the fungibility of resources at health facility level. The second is the difficulty of sustaining a separate funding stream over the medium to long term. The third is the arbitrary basis for selecting high-priority services for exemption. The chapter therefore concludes that this financing mode is unstable and is likely to be transitional.
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