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SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes International Monitor Group O’Hanlon Health Consulting Study of Changamka’s Maternity Savings Card: Preliminary Evaluation Results Second Global Symposium on Health Systems Research November 1, 2012
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SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Mar 29, 2015

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Page 1: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development.Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration withBanyan GlobalJhpiegoMarie Stopes InternationalMonitor GroupO’Hanlon Health Consulting

Study of Changamka’s Maternity Savings Card: Preliminary Evaluation Results

Second Global Symposium on Health Systems ResearchNovember 1, 2012

Page 2: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Overview

• Financial barriers limit use of maternity health services in developing countries.

• Changamka card, which provides convenience as well as savings mechanism, is promising.

• Test of card at Pumwani Hospital in 2010-2011.

• Convenience feature of card proved to be more important to the Pumwani clientele.

• Savings feature is potentially more important to other women in community.

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Page 3: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Financial Barriers Limit Use of Maternal Health Services

• 90% of Kenyans not covered by health insurance, most health services bought with cash

• 43% of births in Kenya occur in health facilities, a significant barrier to reducing MMR

• Few Kenyans have bank accounts, but many use M-Pesa mobile phone system for savings

• M-Pesa cannot be used at health facilities, has no commitment savings mechanism

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Page 4: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

The Promise of a Maternal Services Card

• Simple stored-value smart card (or e-card)

• For users: Convenient, safe and cost-free, allows for dedicated savings

• For health facilities: Low cost, attractive to customers, reduces nonpayment risk

• Maternity services have predictable timeline and cost, are well suited to a savings mechanism.

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Page 5: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Changamka Convenience/Savings Card

• Changamka MicroHealth Limited, established in 2008 in Nairobi

• Offers healthcare savings cards, including the maternity care savings card

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• Facilitates cashless transactions

• Provides a micro-savings mechanism

Page 6: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Trial of Card at Pumwani Hospital

• Card offered at kiosk in Pumwani Hospital from July 2010 to September 2011.

• Deposits at kiosk and through mobile phones (M-Pesa).

• Card use fees borne by the hospital.

• Card can currently be used at 9 private hospitals in Nairobi and in hospitals in Mombasa and Naivasha.

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Page 7: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Trial of Card at Pumwani Hospital

• Pumwani Maternity Hospital owned by Nairobi City Council.

• Largest maternity hospital in Sub-Saharan Africa, with about 27,000 deliveries per year.

• Provides CEOC.

• Pumwani Hospital clientele is large, distinctive.

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Page 8: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Trial of Card at Pumwani Hospital

1st-time mother services (VDLR, HB count, blood

profile, urinalysis) $6.00

Normal delivery:

$36.00 + $4.85/night (1)

or

C-Section:

$72.00+

$4.85/night (3)

Follow-up ANCs: $0.60

Registration & 1st ANC: $3.00

PNCs: $0.60

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Page 9: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Assessment of the Card Trial

• ‘Natural experiment’ at Pumwani Hospital, not a rigorous, controlled evaluation

• Changamka data on user transactions

• Survey data• Changamka card users• Pumwani Hospital clients from same neighborhoods

who did not get Changamka cards• Community sample: Women from same neighborhoods

who gave birth in period covered by the study

• In-depth interviews with subsample of survey respondents

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Page 10: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Card Safety and Convenience Findings

• Card users versus comparison group (women who went to Pumwani Hospital for services before or after 15 months when card was offered):

• Average card user made 4.3 ANC visits, 14% more than comparison group (difference statistically significant across education and income subgroups).

• Card users were more likely to have at least 4 ANC visits (the WHO recommendation).

• Convenience and security appear to drive this result more than savings feature.

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Page 11: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Card Safety and Convenience Findings

• Card user sample:• 78% found card convenient to use,

• 60% said card helped pay for services, leave hospital more easily.

• 80% said the card safer than carrying cash, 87% thought it was more convenient than M-Pesa.

• Community sample:• 71% do not feel safe carrying money to a hospital.

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Page 12: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Card Saving Findings

• 6% of card users engaged in genuine savings and two-thirds of savers used cards for deliveries.

• Card users versus comparison group:• No difference in deliveries at facilities (96% for both

groups).• No difference in use of skilled birth attendants.

• Predictable finding, because most Pumwani Hospital clients committed to facility delivery, many covered by insurance.

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Page 13: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Card Saving Findings

• Card user sample:• 75% said card helped them save money by not letting

them spend it on other things.• 15% said card helped by preventing their families from

spending the money on other things.

• Community sample:• 60% were interested in using a maternity card for

saving if it could be used at multiple facilities.• Interest grew to 87% if delivery cost held to KSh 3,000.

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Page 14: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

Card Users Have More Education and Income than Community Sample

Primary Education;

36.30%

Secondary Education;

45.90%

Post-Sec-

ondary Educa-

tion; 17.80%

Community Sample

Primary Edu-cation; 17.70%

Secondary Education;

51.80%

Post-Sec-ondary Ed-

ucation; 30.50%

Card Users

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Page 15: SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.

SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development.Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration withBanyan GlobalJhpiegoMarie Stopes InternationalMonitor GroupO’Hanlon Health Consulting

[email protected][email protected]

[email protected]

www.shopsproject.org

Thank You