Maternal Health Out-of-Pocket Expenditure and Service Readiness in Lao PDR : Evidence for the National Free Maternal and Child Health Policy from a Household and Health Center Survey
Although Lao PDR has made notable progress in improving maternal and child health (MCH), attainment of the Millennium Development Goal 5 (MDG5) still remains a challenge. This is largely due to the barriers imposed by financial restrictions. In ord...
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Format: | Other Health Study |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/10/18556979/maternal-health-out-of-pocket-expenditure-service-readiness-lao-pdr http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16742 |
Summary: | Although Lao PDR has made notable
progress in improving maternal and child health (MCH),
attainment of the Millennium Development Goal 5 (MDG5) still
remains a challenge. This is largely due to the barriers
imposed by financial restrictions. In order to address these
financial barriers, the Government of Lao PDR has introduced
a national free MCH policy. However, certain non-financial
barriers are also impediments to the achievement of this
goal, such as physical access to remote communities,
especially during rainy season, cultural practices and
beliefs, and poor educational outcomes. In seeking to inform
the implementation and scale-up of this national free MCH
policy at this crucial initial stage, this paper reports on
findings from a household, village and health center survey
The policy implications of the findings from the survey are:
1) although financial protection implied by the national
free MCH policy is strong, reducing financial barriers alone
would not be sufficient to increase the utilization of
services, 2) this policy has the potential to be regressive
due to the higher utilization of MH services by wealthier
households, 3) health providers at all levels of health
facilities would experience substantial marginal decreases
in revenue, given the reimbursement schedules under the
national free MCH policy, and 4) the supply-side readiness
and management capacity of health centers needs to be
improved. This paper is organized to present the background
context, analyses, the equity of MH service utilization, the
supply-side perspective, and key findings and recommendations. |
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