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Published in: International Journal for Equity in Health 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | Research

Equity in the use of public services for mother and newborn child health care in Pakistan: a utilization incidence analysis

Authors: Sadia Mariam Malik, Nabila Ashraf

Published in: International Journal for Equity in Health | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

Poor maternal and infant health indicators are mostly concentrated among low income households in Pakistan and health care expenditures – especially on medical emergencies – are the most common income shocks experienced by the poor. Public investments in health are therefore considered as pro-poor interventions by the government of Pakistan. This study employs nationally representative household data for Pakistan for 2007–08 and 2010–11 to investigate whether benefits from publicly financed services on Mother and Newborn Child Health (MNCH) are effectively captured by the poor in terms of service utilization.

Methods

The study conducts a Utilization Incidence Analysis of the use of public health services for MNCH in Pakistan. For this purpose, the utilization shares of households, ranked by economic status, are computed. The concentration curves are plotted and their dominance is tested against an equal distribution and Lorenz curves to determine whether the distribution is pro-poor and progressive.

Results

Although the shares of bottom income groups in the utilization of most services for MNCH have increased between 2007 and 2011, the utilization of some services such as post-natal consultation; institutional maternal delivery; and Tetanus Toxoid injections for pregnant women remains pro-rich in 2011. The utilization of pre-natal consultation, especially through lady health workers and visitors; the use of Family Panning Units; and immunization services is somewhat evenly distributed. The use of Basic Health Units (BHUs) is found to be pro-poor. The provincial analysis reveals that the province of Baluchistan depicts an unusually high level of inequity in the distribution of utilization benefits from almost all public health services. Finally, in terms of progressivity, public spending on all health services analyzed in the study is found to be progressive at the national level implying that investment in MNCH has the potential to redistribute income from rich to the poor.

Conclusion

To target the poor effectively, the study recommends expanding the network of BHUs as well as basic reproductive and child health care services. The outreach of health facilities in Baluchistan need to be expanded while targeting the poor effectively by mitigating various access costs that prevent them from using public health services.
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
A quintile refers to five equal parts into which a statistical sample can be divided. In case of income distribution it refers to five income groups ranging from lowest 20 % to highest 20 %.
 
2
Seventy two percent of the total health expenditures in Pakistan are financed by private sources out of which 92 % consist of out of pocket expenditures (Government of Pakistan 2008).
 
3
Around fifty four per cent of the households interviewed by the study, conducted by the Planning Commission, Government of Pakistan (2007), reported that they were vulnerable to health care expenditure shocks.
 
4
The reason for these two surveys having separate names is that prior to 1998, the two surveys were conducted separately and were not integrated with each other. However in 1998-99, HIES was integrated with PSLM (that was called Pakistan Integrated Household Survey then) for the first time and since then, HIES has been conducted as an integrated survey with PSLM.
 
6
See e.g. National Institute of Population Studies, 2008.
 
7
Poverty in most South Asian countries, including Pakistan, is a rural phenomenon. Majority of the poor in Pakistan live in rural areas [24].
 
8
According to Pakistan Social and Living Standards Measurement Survey (2007-08), infant mortality rate is the highest in Baluchistan. Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey (2006-07) indicates that maternal mortality ratio in Baluchistan is 785 per 100,000 which is significantly higher than other provinces [5].
 
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Metadata
Title
Equity in the use of public services for mother and newborn child health care in Pakistan: a utilization incidence analysis
Authors
Sadia Mariam Malik
Nabila Ashraf
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
International Journal for Equity in Health / Issue 1/2016
Electronic ISSN: 1475-9276
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-016-0405-x

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