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Published in: Reproductive Health 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Research

Expanding availability of safe abortion services through private sector accreditation: a case study of the Yukti Yojana program in Bihar, India

Authors: Sushanta Kumar Banerjee, Kathryn Louise Andersen, Deepa Navin, Garima Mathias

Published in: Reproductive Health | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

Background

Recognizing the need to increase access to safe abortion services to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity, the state government of Bihar, India introduced an innovative mechanism of accrediting private health care facilities. The program, Yukti Yojana (‘a scheme for solution’), accredits eligible health facilities and supports them in providing abortion-related services free of charge to rural and low-income urban women. This paper describes implementation of Yukti Yojana.

Methods

A descriptive analysis of abortion services provided under the Yukti Yojana program was conducted using four data sources: 1) assessment of accredited facilities over 6 months; 2) induced and incomplete abortion service registers; 3) client exit interviews and associated direct observation of client-provider interaction for a sample of accredited facilities; and 4) in-depth interviews with providers and key stakeholders responsible for providing or influencing abortion services. These analyses assessed characteristics of women receiving abortion services, quality of care and client satisfaction, and barriers and facilitating factors of a successful accreditation process.

Results

Forty-nine private facilities were accredited during the first two years of the program, and 84 % had begun providing abortion services, in all 27,724 women were served. Overall, 53 % of beneficiaries reported holding a “Below Poverty Line” card, while 71 % had low living standard. The majority of women (n = 569) reported satisfaction (90 %) with their care, while 68 % perceived good quality of services. Having a government-led initiative was considered a key element of success, while stringent requirements for site approval, long waiting time for accreditation, complicated and delayed reimbursement process and low reimbursement fees for abortion services were identified as barriers to implementation.

Conclusions

Yukti Yojana provides a model for successfully involving private OB/GYNs and general physicians to deliver safe abortion services to poor women on a large scale and offers additional evidence that public-private partnerships can be used to ensure availability of high-quality maternal health services to women in low-income countries. Private facility accreditation also offers a promising solution to the limited availability of safe abortion services in low resource settings such as Bihar, India.
Footnotes
1
The movement of patients into poverty was determined by the proportion of hospital patients whose assets would fall below poverty line after direct hospitalization costs were deducted from their existing measured resources. The definition of “poverty line” was not provided in this article.
 
2
Equipment essential for induced abortion services include OT or labour table, suction machine for MTP (MVA or EVA), speculum, valsellum or tenaculum, suction cannulae, blunt and sharp curette, cheattle’s forceps, dialator set, kidney tray, autoclave, Boiler and steam sterilizer, sponge holder, chlorine solution, antiseptic solution, atropine injection, Ampicilin, Amoxicillin, or Trihydrate, or Cephalexin or a suitable alternative, Paracetamol, Penatazocine, Dicyclomine or a suitable alternative.
 
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Metadata
Title
Expanding availability of safe abortion services through private sector accreditation: a case study of the Yukti Yojana program in Bihar, India
Authors
Sushanta Kumar Banerjee
Kathryn Louise Andersen
Deepa Navin
Garima Mathias
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Reproductive Health / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1742-4755
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-015-0096-6

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