Skip to main content
PLoS ONEVolume 9, Issue 3, 14 March 2014, Article number e89784

Assessing the elimination of user fees for delivery services in Laos(Article)(Open Access)

  • Boudreaux, C.,
  • Chanthala, P.,
  • Lindelow, M.
  Save all to author list
  • aHarvard School of Public Health, Department of Global Health and Population, Boston, MA, United States
  • bWorld Bank, Human Development Sector, Vientiane, Laos
  • cWorld Bank, Human Development Sector, Brasilia, Brazil

Abstract

A pilot eliminating user fees associated with delivery at the point of services was introduced in two districts of Laos in March 2009. Following two years of implementation, an evaluation was conducted to assess the pilot impact, as well as to document the pilot design and implementation challenges. Study results show that, even in the presence of the substantial access and cultural barriers, user fees associated with delivery at health facilities act as a serious deterrent to care seeking behavior. We find a tripling of facility-based delivery rates in the intervention areas, compared to a 40% increase in the control areas. While findings from the control region suggest that facility-based delivery rates may be on the rise across the country, the substantially higher increase in the pilot areas highlight the impact of financial burden associated with facility-based delivery fees. These fees can play an important role in rapidly increasing the uptake of facility delivery to reach the national targets and, ultimately, to improve maternal and child health outcomes. The pilot achieved important gains while relying heavily on capacity and systems already in place. However, the high cost associated with monitoring and evaluation suggest broad-scale expansion of the pilot activities is likely to necessitate targeted capacity building initiatives, especially in areas with limited district level capacity to manage funds and deliver detailed and timely reports. © 2014 Boudreaux et al.

Indexed keywords

EMTREE medical terms:articlechild healthdeliveryfeehealth behaviorhealth care costhealth care facilityhealth care utilizationhealth servicehumanLaosmaternal welfarecommunity careeconomicshealth care delivery
MeSH:Community Health ServicesFees and ChargesHealth Services AccessibilityHumansLaos
  • ISSN: 19326203
  • CODEN: POLNC
  • Source Type: Journal
  • Original language: English
  • DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089784
  • PubMed ID: 24632592
  • Document Type: Article
  • Publisher: Public Library of Science


© Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Cited by 14 documents

Xie, Y. , Lang, D. , Lin, S.
Mapping maternal health in the new media environment: A scientometric analysis
(2021) International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Sertsewold, S.G. , Debie, A. , Geberu, D.M.
Continuum of maternal healthcare services utilisation and associated factors among women who gave birth in Siyadebirena Wayu district, Ethiopia: Community-based cross-sectional study
(2021) BMJ Open
Ounnavong, P. , Chanthavilay, P. , Khampanisong, P.
Seroprevalence of anti-tetanus antibodies in mothers and cord blood and associated factors in health-care settings in Lao People's Democratic Republic
(2020) Vaccine
View details of all 14 citations
{"topic":{"name":"Maternal Health Services; Prenatal Care; Pregnancy","id":598,"uri":"Topic/598","prominencePercentile":99.05026,"prominencePercentileString":"99.050","overallScholarlyOutput":0},"dig":"aaeb0ec64c06c58e40785097e01a980426b858c726b2de3983de61d6c936e926"}

SciVal Topic Prominence

Topic:
Prominence percentile: