Maternal health care utilization following the implementation of the free maternal health care policy in Ghana: analysis of Ghana demographic and health surveys 2008–2014
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC Health Services Research
Abstract
Background In July 2008, Ghana introduced a ‘free’ maternal health care policy (FMHCP) through the national health
insurance scheme (NHIS) to provide comprehensive antenatal, delivery and post-natal care services to pregnant
women. In this study, we evaluated the ‘free’ policy impact on antenatal care uptake and facility-level delivery
utilization since the policy inception.
Methods The study used two rounds of repeated cross-sectional data from the Ghana Demographic and Health
Survey (GDHS, 2008–2014) and constructed exposure variable of the FMHCP using mothers’ national health insurance
status as a proxy variable and another group of mothers who did not subscribe to the policy. We then generated the
propensity scores of the two groups, ex-post, and matched them to determine the impact of the ‘free’ maternal health
care policy as an intervention on antenatal care uptake and facility-level delivery utilization, using probit and logit
models.
Results Antenatal care uptake and facility-level delivery utilization increased by 8 and 13 percentage points
difference, observed coefficients; 0.08; CI: 95% [0.06–0.10]; p < 0.001 and 0.13; CI: 95% [0.11–0.15], p < 0.001,
respectively. Pregnant women were 1.97 times more likely to make four plus [a WHO recommended number of
visits at the time] antenatal care visits and 1.87 times more likely to give birth in a health care facility of any level in
Ghana between 2008 and 2104; aOR = 1.97; CI: 95% [1.61–2.4]; p < 0.001 and aOR = 1.87; CI: 95% [1.57–2.23]; p < 0.001,
respectively.
Conclusions Antenatal care uptake and facility-level delivery utilization improved significantly in Ghana indicating a
positive impact of the FMHCP on maternal health care utilization in Ghana since its implementation.
Description
Research Article
