Financing Health in Africa - Le blog
  • Home
  • Bloggers
  • Collaborative projects
  • Join our COPs
  • Resources
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Bringing cash to the frontline: the experience of the Health Sector Services Fund in Kenya

8/21/2012

19 Commentaires

 
The Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation of Kenya is developing a pilot Performance-Based Financing (PBF) project in Samburu Central district. Bruno Meessen met Dr. Rael Mutai, the lead person for the project, at a workshop organized by the World Bank in Livingstone, Zambia (May 29-June 1). 
 
BM: In this workshop you presented the Kenyan PBF pilot project. You mentioned a so-called Health Sector Services Fund. Can you tell us a bit more about this fund?

RM: Sometime in 2003, the Ministry of Health did a study to see what proportion of public funds allocated to primary level facilities actually made it to the facilities. It was found that hardly 30% of the funds that left the central government ever reached the small facilities. So the government came up with the idea to do a pilot of a direct funding of these facilities. The pilot was commissioned in the Coastal Province of Kenya. Over a period of 3-4 years, they were able to see these funds that had been channeled directly to facility account were having an impact. Based on that study, the government came together and decided to form the Health Sector Services Fund (HSSF). The HSSF is supposed to be rolled out to the rest of the country.

The strategy states that primary health facilities have to an open bank account and for the governance of the funding, to set up a health facility management committee. The head of the facility is the secretary of this committee; normally a person from the community acts as the chairman. Once that this is established, the whole facility committee is gazetted, so it is a legal entity. Then they are able to decide on their fund.

Are all health facilities eligible for the fund? Do all the health centers get the same amount or is it a formula taking into account, for instance, the population in the catchment area? Practically, how does it go?

The government has determined what to give on a quarterly basis per level of services  - dispensaries (serving population of up to 10,000) and health centers (serving population of up to 30,000) only. In this phase one of the project, the fund works with government facilities only. But in one year or two, once accountability rules are clarified, money will be given even to the faith-based facilities. Yes, there is a criterion that we used to determine which different sections of the country receive different amount. But there is more or less a baseline for a basic amount that all health centers (Ksh. 112,500 per quarter) must receive, there is a basic amount for the dispensaries (Ksh.27,500 per quarter) (1); It is only now that we are factoring in other equity parameters such as the accessibility or the poverty index.

The transfer to the health facility is organized in three components. The 1st component, which is the bulk of the transfer, is for operations and maintenance at the facility level; it covers basic recurrent costs including payment of casual laborers. The 2nd component is for the health facility to implement its Annual Operations Plan, which is broken into quarterly implementation plans listing activities the health facility will do (outreaches, a specific service in the area of maternal and child health, voluntary male circumcision…); health facilities define themselves what to do. The 3rd component is an incentive component, the PBF related part.

Can you indeed explain the link between the HSSF and PBF?

During the design of HSSF, it was envisaged that a proportion of funds would specifically be paid to incentivize the health facility. These incentives are to be given to the facility, but 40% is for investment and 60% is for the staff. This is just a general guideline, there is autonomy: the health facilities can decide that they even invest all so that they can attract more clients. But as it is in the pilot stage, we said 60% is for the staff, 40% is to be reinvested in the facility.

The way we decided our PBF, it is basically operationalizing the 3rd component of the HSSF. So we designed in such a way that the Health Sector Service Fund Secretariat remains the fund holder. They are the people who have been channeling the funds directly to the health facilities; in this new arrangement they will continue: they will be disbursing the performance incentives to the facilities, through their account. We do not even need to start saying which account is where: the Secretariat has the details, there is a master facility list; we will be able to able to track everything. For accessing the HSS fund, the facilities have already to submit a quarterly implementation plan. In PBF, we tell them it must be a business plan. So, what we do is just to modify the existing system.  Under the routine government system, certain things could not be entered in. For instance, if they are going to incentivize a traditional birth-attendant for them to bring a mother to the facility, in the business plan they can write it comfortably and there is no problem and the money will just be disbursed.

This system looks quite interesting. What is the benefit of bringing PBF to the HSSF?

 The general feeling of the country was that we have invested so much money into the health sector in terms of personnel, in terms of infrastructure, but we are not still meeting our target. It is in the process of trying to accelerate progress towards the Millennium Development Goals, the 4 and 5 specifically. The key asset of PBF is the human resource component.  You can post a staff member in a remote area, within no time he has left the place (very high turnover). We hope that by incentivizing them they might find some motivation to continue giving the services and to improve the quality.

 
(1)     1 Kenyan shilling = 0.0119 US dollars. This means that a dispensary gets around USD 0.13 per year per inhabitant.

19 Commentaires

    Our websites

    Photo
    Photo
    Photo

    We like them...

    SINA-Health
    International Health Policies
    CGD

    Archives

    Septembre 2019
    Juin 2019
    Avril 2019
    Mars 2019
    Mai 2018
    Avril 2018
    Mars 2018
    Février 2018
    Janvier 2018
    Décembre 2017
    Octobre 2017
    Septembre 2017
    Août 2017
    Juillet 2017
    Juin 2017
    Mai 2017
    Avril 2017
    Mars 2017
    Février 2017
    Janvier 2017
    Décembre 2016
    Novembre 2016
    Octobre 2016
    Septembre 2016
    Août 2016
    Juillet 2016
    Avril 2016
    Mars 2016
    Février 2016
    Janvier 2016
    Décembre 2015
    Novembre 2015
    Octobre 2015
    Septembre 2015
    Août 2015
    Juillet 2015
    Juin 2015
    Mai 2015
    Avril 2015
    Mars 2015
    Février 2015
    Janvier 2015
    Décembre 2014
    Octobre 2014
    Septembre 2014
    Juillet 2014
    Juin 2014
    Mai 2014
    Avril 2014
    Mars 2014
    Février 2014
    Janvier 2014
    Décembre 2013
    Novembre 2013
    Octobre 2013
    Septembre 2013
    Août 2013
    Juillet 2013
    Juin 2013
    Mai 2013
    Avril 2013
    Mars 2013
    Février 2013
    Janvier 2013
    Décembre 2012
    Novembre 2012
    Octobre 2012
    Septembre 2012
    Août 2012
    Juillet 2012
    Juin 2012
    Mai 2012
    Avril 2012
    Mars 2012
    Février 2012
    Janvier 2012
    Décembre 2011
    Novembre 2011
    Octobre 2011

    Tags

    Tout
    2012
    Accountability
    Aid
    Alex Ergo
    Assurance Maladie
    Bad
    Bamako Initiative
    Bénin
    Bruno Meessen
    Burkina Faso
    Burundi
    Civil Society
    Communauteacute-de-pratique
    Communauté De Pratique
    Community Of Practice
    Community Participation
    Conference
    Cop
    Course
    Couverture Universelle
    CSU
    Déclaration De Harare
    Divine Ikenwilo
    Dr Congo
    économie Politique
    élections
    équité
    Equity
    Fbp
    Financement Basé Sur Les Résultats
    Financement Public
    Fragilité
    Fragility
    Free Health Care
    Global Fund
    Global Health Governance
    Gratuité
    Gratuité
    Health Equity Fund
    Health Insurance
    ICT
    Identification Des Pauvres
    Isidore Sieleunou
    Jb Falisse
    Jurrien Toonen
    Kenya
    Knowledge-management
    Kouamé
    Leadership
    Mali
    Management
    Maroc
    Maternal And Child Health
    Médicaments
    Mise En Oeuvre
    Mutuelle
    National Health Accounts
    Ngo
    Niger
    Omd
    OMS
    Parlement
    Participation Communautaire
    Pba
    Pbf
    Plaidoyer
    Policy Process
    Politique
    Politique De Gratuité
    Politique De Gratuité
    Post Conflit
    Post-conflit
    Private Sector
    Processus Politique
    Qualité Des Soins
    Qualité Des Soins
    Quality Of Care
    Recherche
    Redevabilité
    Reform
    Réforme
    Research
    Results Based Financing
    Rwanda
    Santé Maternelle
    Secteur Privé
    Sénégal
    Société Civile
    Uganda
    Universal Health Coverage
    User Fee Removal
    Voeux 2012
    Voucher
    WHO

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.