How do free healthcare policies impact on utilization of maternal and child health services in fragile settings? Evidence from a controlled interrupted time-series analysis in Burkina Faso.

Publication date: Aug 24, 2024

Burkina Faso has implemented a nationwide free healthcare policy (gratuitcE9) for pregnant and lactating women and children under five since April 2016. Studies have shown that free healthcare policies can increase healthcare service use. However, the emerging COVID-19 pandemic, escalating insecurity, and the political situation in recent years might have affected the implementation of such policies. No studies have looked at whether the gratuitcE9 maintained high service use under such changing circumstances. Our study aimed to assess the effects of gratuitcE9 on the utilization of facility-based delivery and curative care of children under five in light of this changing context. We employed a controlled interrupted time series analysis using data from the Health Management Information System and annual statistical reports of 2,560 primary health facilities from January 2013 to December 2021. We focused on facility-based deliveries and curative care for children under five, with antenatal care and curative care for children over five as non-equivalent controls. We employed segmented regression with the generalized least square model, accounting for autocorrelation and monthly seasonality. The monthly utilization rate among children under five compared to those above five (controls) immediately increased by 111. 19 visits per 1,000 children (95% CI: 91. 12; 131. 26) due to the gratuitcE9. This immediate effect declined afterwards with a monthly change of 0. 93 per 1,000 children (95% CI: -1. 57, -0. 29). We found no significant effects, both immediate and long-term, on the use of maternal care services attributable to the gratuitcE9. Our findings suggest that free healthcare policies can be instrumental in improving healthcare, yet more comprehensive strategies are needed to maintain healthcare utilization. Our findings reflect the overall situation in the country, while localised research is needed to understand the effect of insecurity and the pandemic at the local level, and the effects of gratuitcE9 across geographies and socio-economic statuses.

Concepts Keywords
Healthcare Burkina Faso
Monthly child health
Pandemic facility-based delivery
Women Free healthcare policy
healthcare service utilization

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease VO time
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO facility
disease VO monthly
disease IDO country

Original Article

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