The objective of the health system revitalization undergone in Benin and Guinea since 1986 is to improve the eectiveness of primary health care at the periphery. Second in a series of ยฎve, this article presents the results of an analysis of data from the health centres involved in the Bamako Initiat
Affordability, cost-effectiveness and efficiency of primary health care: the Bamako Initiative experience in Benin and Guinea
โ Scribed by Agnes Soucat; Daniel Levy-Bruhl; Xavier de Bethune; Placide Gbedonou; Jean-Pierre Lamarque; Ousmane Bangoura; Ousmane Camara; Timothee Gandaho; Christine Ortiz; Miloud Kaddar; Rudolf Knippenberg
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 641 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0749-6753
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Since 1986 two West African countries, Benin and Guinea, have been actively reorganizing their peripheral health systems according to strategies subsequently called the ``Bamako Initiative''. Two preceding articles described the strategies implemented and the increased eectiveness of primary health care (PHC) witnessed over a period of six years. This article presents an analysis of cost and coverage data from biannual monitoring sessions between 1988 and 1993 in approximately 200 health centres in Benin and 214 in Guinea.
In order to assess aordability, the total and per capita recurrent costs for operational health centres are analysed and then compared. The cost analysis reveals a mean total cost per health centre per year of slightly over US$11,000 in Benin and nearly US$9,000 in Guinea. The median cost per capita per year is approximately US$1.0 in Benin and between US$0.60 and US$0.80 in Guinea. Comparisons of these costs between regions, health centres and over time (as coverage levels evolved) show very little variation in either country.
Cost-eectiveness is estimated by allocating these costs to immunization, antenatal and curative care and comparing them to the coverage achieved with these interventions. First, the cost-eectiveness of the Bamako Initiative (BI) system as a whole is analysed. The cost per fully vaccinated child is calculated at US$10.9 in Benin and US$8.8 in Guinea. The cost per woman receiving at least three antenatal visits is US$7 in Benin and US$4.7 in Guinea. For curative care, cost per full treatment is US$1.6 in Benin and half this amount in Guinea. Cost-eectiveness is variable between regions, health centres and over time. An analysis of the characteristics of the most and least cost-eective centres reveals that these dierences in cost-eectiveness are mainly caused by the coverage levels achieved, since total costs are relatively stable.
Finally the eciency of drug management and prescriptions as well as of outreach for the expanded programme of immunizations (EPI) is estimated by relating speciยฎc drug and outreach costs to the number of beneยฎciaries. The average cost of drugs per treatment is around US$0.5 in Benin and around US$0.3 in Guinea. Cost analysis of outreach activities undertaken for EPI in Guinea revealed a similar average cost per child completely vaccinated for health centres with dierent intensities of outreach (approximately US$10) and an additional cost per child vaccinated attributable to outreach of US$1ยฑ2. &1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Curative and preventive care utilization in Bamako Initiative health centres in Guinea and Benin increased signiยฎcantly. Service based data and household survey results are compared and interpreted to evaluate the equity aspects of the Bamako Initiative programmes in these settings. Improvements in