Removing user fees: learning from international experience to support the process
Open Access
- 20 October 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Health Policy and Planning
- Vol. 26 (Suppl. 2) , ii104-ii117
- https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czr064
Abstract
Removing user fees could improve service coverage and access, in particular among the poorest socio-economic groups, but quick action without prior preparation could lead to unintended effects, including quality deterioration and excessive demands on health workers. This paper illustrates the process needed to make a realistic forecast of the possible resource implications of a well-implemented user fee removal programme and proposes six steps for a successful policy change: (1) analysis of a country's initial position (including user fee level, effectiveness of exemption systems and impact of fee revenues at facility level); (2) estimation of the impact of user fee removal on service utilization; (3) estimation of the additional requirements for human resources, drugs and other inputs, and corresponding financial requirements; (4) mobilization of additional resources (both domestic and external) and development of locally-tailored strategies to compensate for the revenue gap and costs associated with increased utilization; (5) building political commitment for the policy reform; (6) communicating the policy change to all stakeholders. The authors conclude that countries that intend to remove user fees can maximize benefits and avoid potential pitfalls through the utilization of the approach and tools described.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Performance-based payment: some reflections on the discourse, evidence and unanswered questionsHealth Policy and Planning, 2009
- Public Service Provision, User Fees and Political TurmoilJournal of African Economies, 2007
- How Big is the Crowding-Out Effect of User Fees in the Rural Areas of Ethiopia? Implications for Equity and Resources MobilizationWorld Development, 2004
- The impact of user fee exemption on service utilization and treatment seeking behaviour: the case of malaria in SudanThe International Journal of Health Planning and Management, 2004
- Overcoming barriers to health service access: influencing the demand sideHealth Policy and Planning, 2004
- The impact of price changes on demand for family planning and reproductive health services in Ecuador.Health Policy and Planning, 2002
- User-payment, decentralization and health service utilization in ZambiaHealth Policy and Planning, 2001
- The Lessons of User Fee Experience in AfricaHealth Policy and Planning, 1997
- The fall and rise of cost sharing in Kenya: the impact of phased implementationHealth Policy and Planning, 1996
- Mixed-Scanning: A "Third" Approach to Decision-MakingPublic Administration Review, 1967