Power to the People : Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment of a Community-Based Monitoring Project in Uganda

This paper analyzes the importance of strengthening the relationship of accountability between health service providers and citizens for improving access to and quality of health care. How this is to be achieved, and whether it works, however, remain open questions. The paper presents a randomized field experiment on increasing community-based monitoring. As communities began to more extensively monitor the provider, both the quality and quantity of health service provision improved. One year into the program, there are large increases in utilization, significant weight-for-age z-score gains of infants, and markedly lower deaths among children. The findings on staff behavior suggest that the improvements in quality and quantity of health service delivery resulted from an increased effort by the staff to serve the community. Overall, the results suggest that community monitoring can play an important role in improving service delivery when traditional top-down supervision is ineffective.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Björkman, Martina, Svensson, Jakob
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2007-06
Subjects:AGGREGATE OUTCOMES, ANTENATAL CARE, CAPITATION, CHILD DEATHS, CLINICS, COMMUNITIES, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, DELIVERY SYSTEM, DIARRHEA, DISEASES, DISPENSARIES, DISTRICTS, DRINKING WATER, ENGINEERS, EXPENDITURES, EXTERNALITIES, FAMILY PLANNING, HEALTH, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH CARE DELIVERY, HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, HEALTH CARE PROVISION, HEALTH CARE SYSTEM, HEALTH CENTERS, HEALTH CLINICS, HEALTH EDUCATION, HEALTH FACILITIES, HEALTH INDICATORS, HEALTH OUTCOMES, HEALTH PROVISION, HEALTH SECTOR, HEALTH SERVICE, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH SYSTEM, HEALTH WORKERS, HOSPITALS, HOUSEHOLDS, IMMUNIZATION, INFANTS, INFECTION, INTERVENTION, LABORATORY SERVICES, MALARIA, MEDICAL CARE, MORTALITY, NURSES, NURSING, ORAL REHYDRATION, ORAL REHYDRATION THERAPY, ORT, OUTPATIENT CARE, OUTPATIENT SERVICES, PATIENT, PATIENTS, PLANNING, PNEUMONIA, POLICY RESEARCH, POSTERS, PRIMARY HEALTH CARE, PRIMARY SCHOOLS, PROBABILITY, PROVIDER ­INCENTIVES, PUBLIC HEALTH, PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES, PUBLIC SECTOR, QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE, REHABILITATION, RURAL AREAS, SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, SOCIAL SANCTIONS, TREATMENT, VILLAGES, WORKERS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/06/7746889/power-people-evidence-randomized-field-experiment-community-based-monitoring-project-uganda
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/7447
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