Gujarat govt's programme to reduce maternal deaths, infant mortality failed to deliver, says WHO study
Counterview Desk
A high-profile study, carried out by half-a-dozen scholars associated
with the Duke University, Rand Corporation, World Bank, Stanford University and
Stanford Medical School (all from US), and Sambodhi Research and Communications
Pvt Ltd (New Delhi), has come to the drastic conclusion that the Chiranjeevi
yojna of the Gujarat government, launched to reduce infant and maternal deaths
in rural areas, has been largely unsuccessful. Published in the Bulletin of the
World Health Organization (WHO), it suggests that the samples collected by the
scholars have put a question mark on the project’s aim of encouraging mothers to
deliver in private hospitals, with the government subsidizing the costs.
Titled “Effect of Chiranjeevi Yojana on institutional
deliveries and neonatal and maternal outcomes in Gujarat, India: a
difference-in-differences analysis”, its authors, Manoj Mohanan, Sebastian
Bauhoff, Gerard La Forgia, Kimberly Singer Babiarz, Kultar Singh and Grant
Miller, say, there was an “increase in institutional delivery rates over time
across Gujarat”, but this was “unrelated to the Chiranjeevi yojana.”
The study says, “The data collected through our study
indicated that implementation of the programme was not associated with a
statistically significant change in the probability of institutional delivery
(2.42 percentage points).” In fact, it underlines, “The programme was also not
associated with changes in the incidence of birth-related maternal
complications, the use of antenatal and postnatal services or the use of
neonatal intensive care.”
It underlines, “Our survey data suggests that 54% of the
mothers in our sample suffered complications, including premature delivery,
prolonged and obstructed labour, excessive bleeding, breech presentation,
convulsions, hypertension, fever, incontinence or other birth-related problems
after the programme had been implemented – and that the probability of these
complications did not significantly change under the Chiranjeevi yojana.”
“Even if the programme has not increased institutional
delivery rates, we would expect to see lower mean household expenditures on
deliveries, given that the programme had paid providers over US$ 32 million as
of 2012. However, analysis of our survey data indicated that implementation of
the programme had no significant relationship either with the probability that
households reported any delivery-related spending, or with mean hospital
spending for delivery conditional on any spending”, it says.
The study underlines, “Our findings indicate that the
Chiranjeevi yojana was not associated with changes in the probability of
institutional delivery (including delivery at private institutions), maternal
morbidity or delivery-related household expenditure. These findings differ from
those reported by previous evaluations suggesting substantial benefits of the
Chiranjeevi yojana, including a 27 per cent increase in institutional
deliveries, a 90 per cent reduction in maternal deaths and a 60 per cent
reduction in neonatal deaths.”
It insists, “These earlier studies did not address
self-selection of women into institutional delivery, reporting inaccuracies by
hospitals, or any increases in institutional deliveries over time that were
unrelated to the programme. The programme was rolled out in a period when the
economy of Gujarat was growing by over 10 per cent per year.”
Claiming that the results of the study are “robust to the
inclusion of a wide variety of control variables”, and that “the staggered
introduction of the Chiranjeevi yojana does not appear correlated with
pre-existing trend differences in institutional delivery rates”, it notes, “There
are several possible explanations for observing no increase in the probability
of institutional delivery associated with the Chiranjeevi yojana. One is that
the quality of services provided by private maternity hospitals is poor or, at
least, is perceived to be poor by the local population. As a result, demand for
institutional delivery may be low even if such delivery is provided free of
charge.”
The study also points out that – despite the support of the
programme – “institutional deliveries in Gujarat remain associated with large
transportation costs, informal payments or other expenses that make programme
benefits small relative to the full cost of institutional delivery.” The study emphasizes,
“The finding of little or no association between the Chiranjeevi yojana and the
out-of-pocket costs of deliveries is more puzzling. Even if the programme
failed to make institutional delivery more attractive for any women, it should
have reduced the household expenses for the many poor women who still chose
institutional delivery.”
In fact, the poor women were found to be “asked to pay fees
for deliveries in health facilities that were participating in the programme… It
seems possible that some providers are providing extra, chargeable services –
or simply increasing side charges. If charges are being made for extra
services, those services do not appear to have any discernible health benefits.”
Interestingly, the study comes against the backdrop of the fact
that the Chiranjeevi yojana received Wall Street Journal Asian Innovation Award
in 2006 and has been hailed by some as a model for wide adoption throughout
India. It was launched to help address the shortage of obstetricians at public
hospitals accessible to low-income women in rural areas.
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