Informal payments and the quality of health care: the case of Tanzania
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Informal payments and the quality of health care: the case of Tanzania
Seminar CMI/PUSER, 28 November 2006
Aziza Mwisongo (NIMR) and Ottar Mæstad (CMI)
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Background and purpose
• Health worker motivation and performance
• Performance issues– Clinical performance– Patient courtesy– Corruption– Absenteeism
Photo: Magnus Hatlebakk
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Informal payments and health outcomes
Informal payments
??
Utilisation Quality of care
Health
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Methodology
8 focus groups
– 4 urban, 4 rural
– One cadre per group
• Doctors
• Clinical Officers
• Nurses
• Assistants
– One worker per facility in each group
– Each facility represented in several groups
– Language: Swahili
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Participant characteristics
Number of participants 58
Age (mean) 42 yrs
Female share 60 %
Level of care
Hospital 48 %
Health centre 22 %
Dispensary 28 %
Years in health sector (mean) 19 yrs
Years in current position (mean) 10 yrs
Employer
Government 74 %
Private for profit 21 %
Faith based 5 %
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Types of informal payments
• Bypass a queue
• Pay for care
• Get drugs and supplies
– Artificial shortages
– In-facility drugs shop
• Gifts of appreciation
• Pay for illegal services (abortion)
• Pay for improved bargaining power in the household
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Characteristics of the system
• All groups of health workers are involved
• Sharing of informal incomes
– Limited or absent within cadre
– More common across cadres
• Perceived unfairness of the allocation of payments
• Less informal payments in private facilities
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Competition for payments may increase quality
Therefore, the patient will decide to give money to the one who has a good heart and who can help you rather than the one who has a difficult heart
Nurse, urban
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Withhold care in order to bargain for a larger share of payments
if the nurses know that a certain doctor has already received a bribe then the nurses start to avoid
or give less attention to that patient Doctor, rural
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Withhold care in order to signal that quality has a price
sometimes when I was accompanying the patients to Muhimbili, the situation I saw there it’s really shocking.
You meet with the nurse assistant, she abuses you, she refuses to receive a patient,
…and even if she will end up in receiving the patient, she does it by accompanying with the abuses
Nurse, urban
…if you go at the health facility you’ll find a nurse with the ugly face
who is just singing without showing any sense of care…
Nurse, urban
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Stealing – negative (but small?) impact on quality
…they pretend that there are the drugs that are missing… Because the patient wants the service s/he will end up asking “for how much are they sold?” and s/he can say they are sold
for 3,000/= or 4,000/= so if you give me this money I can get them. Once s/he get those monies then s/he just take the drugs
and send them to the patients …S/he does not buy them, the drugs are there.
Nurses, urban
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Frustrations due to perceived unfairness may reduce quality
…if I am not with good heart and have seen that a doctor has been bribed but I have not received any share from it,
I may, if supposed to give six tablets, give four... if angry I may even give two tablets.
Medical assistant, rural
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Non-corrupt workers may withhold care
if you decide to take care of that patient to make sure that you want to get proper diagnosis,
then people will start to think that the doctor has got something
Clinical officer, rural
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The socio-economic distribution of quality care
…it happens that the amount of money they gave you is very small say it is 500/=, but the patient will say: “I gave that nurse my money”. S/he will hang on you to the extent that you’ll regret for taking that money.
Medical assistant, urban
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Keeping health workers at their duty posts may increase quality
• Reduced attrition
• Reduced need for second jobs