Rewarding Provider Performance to Enable a Healthy Start to Life : Evidence from Argentina's Plan Nacer

Argentina's Plan Nacer provides insurance for maternal and child health care to uninsured families. The program allocates funding to provinces based on enrollment of beneficiaries and adds performance incentives based on indicators of the use and quality of maternal and child health care services and health outcomes. The provinces use these resources to pay health facilities to provide maternal and child health care services to beneficiaries. This paper analyzes the impact of Plan Nacer on birth outcomes. The analysis uses data from the universe of birth records in seven Argentine provinces for 2004 to 2008 and exploits the geographic phasing in of Plan Nacer over time. The paper finds that the program increases the use and quality of prenatal care as measured by the number of visits and the probability of receiving a tetanus vaccine. Beneficiaries' probability of low birth-weight is estimated to be reduced by 19 percent. Beneficiaries have a 74 percent lower chance of in-hospital neonatal mortality in larger facilities and approximately half this reduction comes from preventing low birth weight and half from better postnatal care. The analysis finds that the cost of saving a disability-adjusted life year through the program was $814, which is highly cost-effective compared with Argentina's $6,075 gross domestic product per capita over this period. Although there are small negative spillover effects on prenatal care utilization of non-beneficiary populations in clinics covered by Plan Nacer, no spillover is found on their birth outcomes.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giovagnoli, Paula, Gertler, Paul, Martinez, Sebastian
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014-05
Subjects:ABORTION, ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES, ANAEMIA, ANEMIA, BABIES, BABY, BABY CARE, BIRTH OUTCOMES, BIRTH-WEIGHT, BULLETIN, BURDEN OF DISEASE, CAPITATION, CARE DURING PREGNANCY, CENSUSES, CERTIFICATION, CESAREAN SECTION, CESAREAN SECTIONS, CHILD HEALTH, CHILD HEALTH CARE, CHILD HEALTH SERVICES, CHILD MEDICAL CARE, CHILD MORTALITY, CITIES, CLINICAL GUIDELINES, CLINICAL PROTOCOLS, CLINICAL SERVICES, CLINICS, COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, COUNSELING, DEATH CERTIFICATES, DEATH RATE, DEFECATION, DELIVERY CARE, DENTAL CARE, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DIAGNOSIS, DIAGNOSTIC TESTS, DISABILITY, DISEASE, DISEASE RESEARCH, DISEASES, EARLY DETECTION, ECONOMIC GROWTH, EXPENDITURES, FAMILIES, FETUS, FIRST BIRTH, FIXED COSTS, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, HEALTH CARE SERVICES, HEALTH CARE SYSTEM, HEALTH CLINICS, HEALTH EDUCATION, HEALTH FACILITIES, HEALTH FINANCING, HEALTH IMPACTS, HEALTH INDICATORS, HEALTH INSURANCE, HEALTH OFFICIALS, HEALTH OUTCOMES, HEALTH POLICY, HEALTH PROBLEMS, HEALTH PROGRAMS, HEALTH PROMOTION, HEALTH PROVIDERS, HEALTH RESULTS, HEALTH SECTOR, HEALTH STATUS, HEALTH TARGETS, HEALTH-CARE PROVIDERS, HIGH-RISK, HIV, HOSPITAL, HOSPITAL MEDICAL STAFF, HOSPITALS, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS, IMMUNIZATION, IMMUNIZATION COVERAGE, IMMUNIZATION STATUS, IMMUNODEFICIENCY, IMPROVEMENTS IN QUALITY OF CARE, INCOME, INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS, INFANT, INFANT HEALTH, INFANT HEALTH SERVICES, INFANT MORTALITY, INFORMATION SYSTEM, INTERVENTION, LABOR MARKET, LIFE EXPECTANCY, LIVE BIRTHS, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, LOW BIRTH WEIGHT, LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES, MATERNAL AGE, MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH, MATERNAL CARE, MATERNAL DEATHS, MATERNAL HEALTH, MATERNAL HEALTH SERVICES, MATERNITY HOSPITALS, MEAN BIRTH WEIGHT, MEASLES, MEASLES IMMUNIZATION, MEDICAID, MEDICAL CARE, MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, MEDICAL FACILITIES, MEDICAL RECORDS, MEDICAL SERVICES, MEDICAL STAFF, MEDICINE, MINISTRY OF HEALTH, MORALITY, MORTALITY, MORTALITY RATE, MOTHER, NATIONAL GOVERNMENT, NATIONAL LEVEL, NEONATAL DEATH, NEONATAL MORTALITY, NEONATAL SERVICES, NEWBORN, NEWBORNS, NUMBER OF BIRTHS, NUTRITION, OBSTETRIC CARE, PATIENT, PATIENTS, POLICY CONCERN, POLICY DISCUSSIONS, POLICY RESEARCH, POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER, POPULATION CENSUS, POPULATION GROUPS, POSTNATAL CARE, PREGNANCIES, PREGNANCY, PREGNANCY STATUS, PREGNANCY TEST, PREGNANT WOMEN, PRENATAL CARE, PRENATAL CARE UTILIZATION, PRIMARY HEALTH CARE, PRIMARY HEALTH-CARE, PRIVATE PROVIDERS, PROBABILITY, PROGRESS, PROVIDER INCENTIVES, PUBLIC HEALTH, PUBLIC HEALTH CARE, PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES, PUBLIC SERVICES, QUALITY CARE, QUALITY OF HEALTH, QUALITY OF SERVICES, REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, RESPECT, RISK FACTORS, SANITATION, SCHOOLS, SECRETARY OF HEALTH, SERVICE PROVIDER, SERVICE PROVIDERS, SOCIAL SECURITY, SPILLOVER, TETANUS, TRANSPORTATION, TREATMENT, USE OF RESOURCES, VACCINATION, VACCINE, VACCINES, WOMEN DURING PREGNANCY, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/05/19546892/rewarding-provider-performance-enable-healthy-start-life-evidence-argentinas-plan-nacer
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/18801
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