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Conditional cash transfer schemes in Nigeria: potential gains for maternal and child health service uptake in a national pilot programme
by
Morris, Laura
, Pate, Muhammad A
, Okoli, Ugo
, Muhammad, Ado
, Aigbe, Chidimma
, Oshin, Adetokunbo
in
Child Health Services - economics
/ Delivery, Obstetric
/ Female
/ Gynecology
/ Health care
/ Health facilities
/ Humans
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Interrupted Time Series Analysis
/ Intervention
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Maternal Death - prevention & control
/ Maternal Health Services - economics
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Nigeria
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Perinatal Death - prevention & control
/ Pilot Projects
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy and childbirth in low and middle income countries
/ Prenatal care
/ Prenatal Care - utilization
/ Primary care
/ Program Evaluation
/ Regression Analysis
/ Reimbursement, Incentive
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Research Article
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Health - statistics & numerical data
/ Subsidies
/ Womens health
2014
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Conditional cash transfer schemes in Nigeria: potential gains for maternal and child health service uptake in a national pilot programme
by
Morris, Laura
, Pate, Muhammad A
, Okoli, Ugo
, Muhammad, Ado
, Aigbe, Chidimma
, Oshin, Adetokunbo
in
Child Health Services - economics
/ Delivery, Obstetric
/ Female
/ Gynecology
/ Health care
/ Health facilities
/ Humans
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Interrupted Time Series Analysis
/ Intervention
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Maternal Death - prevention & control
/ Maternal Health Services - economics
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Nigeria
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Perinatal Death - prevention & control
/ Pilot Projects
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy and childbirth in low and middle income countries
/ Prenatal care
/ Prenatal Care - utilization
/ Primary care
/ Program Evaluation
/ Regression Analysis
/ Reimbursement, Incentive
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Research Article
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Health - statistics & numerical data
/ Subsidies
/ Womens health
2014
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Conditional cash transfer schemes in Nigeria: potential gains for maternal and child health service uptake in a national pilot programme
by
Morris, Laura
, Pate, Muhammad A
, Okoli, Ugo
, Muhammad, Ado
, Aigbe, Chidimma
, Oshin, Adetokunbo
in
Child Health Services - economics
/ Delivery, Obstetric
/ Female
/ Gynecology
/ Health care
/ Health facilities
/ Humans
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Interrupted Time Series Analysis
/ Intervention
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Maternal Death - prevention & control
/ Maternal Health Services - economics
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Nigeria
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Perinatal Death - prevention & control
/ Pilot Projects
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy and childbirth in low and middle income countries
/ Prenatal care
/ Prenatal Care - utilization
/ Primary care
/ Program Evaluation
/ Regression Analysis
/ Reimbursement, Incentive
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Research Article
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Health - statistics & numerical data
/ Subsidies
/ Womens health
2014
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Conditional cash transfer schemes in Nigeria: potential gains for maternal and child health service uptake in a national pilot programme
Journal Article
Conditional cash transfer schemes in Nigeria: potential gains for maternal and child health service uptake in a national pilot programme
2014
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Overview
Background
This paper describes use of a Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) programme to encourage use of critical MNCH services among rural women in Nigeria.
Methods
The CCT programme was first implemented as a pilot in 37 primary health care facilities (PHCs), in nine Nigerian states. The programme entitles women using these facilities up to N5,000 (approximately US$30) if they attend antenatal care (ANC), skilled delivery, and postnatal care. There are 88 other PHCs from these nine states included in this study, which implemented a standard package of supply upgrades without the CCT. Data on monthly service uptake throughout the continuum of care was collected at 124 facilities during quarterly monitoring visits. An interrupted time series using segmented linear regression was applied to estimate separately the effects of the CCT programme and supply package on service uptake.
Results
From April 2013-March 2014, 20,133 women enrolled in the CCT. Sixty-four percent of beneficiaries returned at least once after registration, and 80% of women delivering with skilled attendance returned after delivery. The CCT intervention is associated with a statistically significant increase in the monthly number of women attending four or more ANC visits (increase of 15.12 visits per 100,000 catchment population, p < 0.01; 95% confidence interval 7.38 to 22.85), despite a negative level effect immediately after the intervention began (-45.53/100,000 catchment population; p < 0.05; 95% CI −82.71 to −8.36). A statistically significant increase was also observed in the monthly number of women receiving two or more Tetanus toxoid doses during pregnancy (21.65/100,000 catchment population; p < 0.01; 95% CI 9.23 to 34.08). Changes for other outcomes with the CCT intervention (number of women attending first ANC visit; number of deliveries with skilled attendance; number of neonates receiving OPV at birth) were not found to be statistically significant.
Conclusions
The results show that the CCT intervention is capable of significant effects on service uptake, although results for several outcomes of interest were inconclusive. Key lessons learnt from the pilot phase of implementation include a need to track beneficiary retention throughout the continuum of care as closely as possible, and avert loss to follow-up.
Publisher
BioMed Central,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
Child Health Services - economics
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Interrupted Time Series Analysis
/ Maternal Death - prevention & control
/ Maternal Health Services - economics
/ Medicine
/ Nigeria
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Perinatal Death - prevention & control
/ Pregnancy and childbirth in low and middle income countries
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