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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2024

Open Access 01-12-2024 | Public Health | Research

Markets, incentives, and health promotion can improve family planning and maternal health practices: a quasi-experimental evaluation of a tech-enabled social franchising and social marketing platform in India

Authors: Sumeet R. Patil, Lakshmi Gopalakrishnan, Vishal Sabasu Sai, Richard Matikanya, Payal Rajpal

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Background

Improving family planning and maternal health outcomes are critical to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. While evidence on the effectiveness of government-driven public health programs is extensive, more research is needed on effectiveness of private-sector interventions, especially in low- and middle-income countries. We evaluated the impacts of a commercial social-franchising and social-marketing program – Tiko Platform – which created a local ecosystem of health promoters, healthcare providers, pharmacies, stockists/wholesalers, and lifestyle shops. It provided economic incentives through discounts and reward points to nudge health-seeking behaviors from enrolled women consumers/beneficiaries.

Methods

An ex-post facto evaluation was commissioned, and we employed a quasi-experimental design to compare outcomes related to the use of family planning, and antenatal and postnatal services between users and non-users who had registered for Tiko in three North Indian cities. Between March and April 2021, 1514 married women were surveyed, and outcome indicators were constructed based on recall. Despite statistical approaches to control for confounding, the effect of COVID-19 lockdown on Tiko operations and methodological limitations preclude inferring causality or arguing generalizability.

Results

We found a strong association between the use of the Tiko platform and the current use of temporary modern contraceptives [non-users: 9.5%, effect: +9.4 percentage points (pp), p-value < 0.001], consumption of 100 or more iron-folic-acid tablets during pregnancy [non-users: 25.5%, effect: +14 pp, p-value < 0.001], receiving four or more antenatal check-ups [non-users: 18.3%, effect: +11.3 pp, p-value 0.007], and receiving postnatal check-up within six weeks of birth [non-users: 50.9%, effect: +7.5 pp, p-value 0.091]. No associations were found between the use of the Tiko platform and the current use of any type of contraceptive (temporary, permanent, or rudimentary). Effects were pronounced when a community health worker of the National Health Mission also worked as a health promoter for the Tiko Platform.

Conclusion

Commercial interventions that harness market-driven approaches of incentives, social marketing, and social franchising improved family planning and maternal health practices through higher utilization of private market providers while maintaining access to government health services. Findings support a unifying approach to public health without separating government versus private services, but more rigorous and generalizable research is needed.

Trial registration

NCT05725278 at clinicaltrials.gov (retrospective); 13/02/2023.
Footnotes
1
For other research objectives of interest to Triggerise, sampling of Pro agents from all seven cities was done. These objectives or results are not a focus of this manuscript.
 
2
A longer version of the tool was administered to a subset of users, and it collected richer data on socio-economic characteristics. However, we do not present these results because this data was not captured from non-users, and thus, not used in adjusting impact estimates.
 
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Metadata
Title
Markets, incentives, and health promotion can improve family planning and maternal health practices: a quasi-experimental evaluation of a tech-enabled social franchising and social marketing platform in India
Authors
Sumeet R. Patil
Lakshmi Gopalakrishnan
Vishal Sabasu Sai
Richard Matikanya
Payal Rajpal
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keyword
Public Health
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2024
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-17413-w

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