Background: Health service fees constitute substantial barriers for women seeking childbirth and postnatal care. In an effort to reduce health inequities, the government of Kenya in 2006 introduced the output-based approach (OBA), or voucher programme, to increase poor women’s access to quality Safe Motherhood services including postnatal care. To help improve service quality, OBA programmes purchase services on behalf of the poor and marginalised, with provider reimbursements for verified services. Kenya’s programme accredited health facilities in three districts as well as in two informal Nairobi settlements. Methods: Postnatal care quality in voucher health facilities (n = 21) accredited in 2006 and in similar non-voucher health faciliti...
Objective: To measure whether there was an association between the introduction of an output-based v...
Objective: To assess changes in the quality of care following the introduction of a new postnatal pa...
Introduction: In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 li...
Background: Health service fees constitute substantial barriers for women seeking childbirth and pos...
BACKGROUND: Health service fees constitute substantial barriers for women seeking childbirth and pos...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya’s Safe Motherhoo...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya's Safe Motherhoo...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya’s Safe Motherhoo...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya’s Safe Motherhoo...
Introduction: From 2006 to 2016, the Government of Kenya implemented a reproductive health voucher p...
Although available evidence indicates that vouchers improve service utilization among the target pop...
In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 live births over...
In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 live births over...
Background: In resource-constrained settings, Community Health Workers (CHWs) are the first point of...
Objective: To measure whether there was an association between the introduction of an output-based v...
Objective: To assess changes in the quality of care following the introduction of a new postnatal pa...
Introduction: In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 li...
Background: Health service fees constitute substantial barriers for women seeking childbirth and pos...
BACKGROUND: Health service fees constitute substantial barriers for women seeking childbirth and pos...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya’s Safe Motherhoo...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya's Safe Motherhoo...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya’s Safe Motherhoo...
This study tests the group-level causal relationship between the expansion of Kenya’s Safe Motherhoo...
Introduction: From 2006 to 2016, the Government of Kenya implemented a reproductive health voucher p...
Although available evidence indicates that vouchers improve service utilization among the target pop...
In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 live births over...
In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 live births over...
Background: In resource-constrained settings, Community Health Workers (CHWs) are the first point of...
Objective: To measure whether there was an association between the introduction of an output-based v...
Objective: To assess changes in the quality of care following the introduction of a new postnatal pa...
Introduction: In Kenya, the maternal mortality rate had ranged from 328 to 501 deaths per 100,000 li...