Accountable Care Reforms Improve Women's And Children's Health In Nepal.
Over the past decade the Ministry of Health of Nepal and the nonprofit Possible have partnered to deliver primary and secondary health care via a public-private partnership. We applied an accountable care framework that we previously developed to describe the delivery of their integrated reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health services in the Achham district in rural Nepal. In a prospective pre-post study, examining pregnancies at baseline and 541 pregnancies in follow-up over the course of eighteen months, we found an improvement in population-level indicators linked to reducing maternal and infant mortality: receipt of four antenatal care visits (83 percent to 90 percent), institutional birth rate (81 percent to 93 percent), and the prevalence of postpartum contraception (19 percent to 47 percent). The intervention cost $3.40 per capita (at the population level) and $185 total per pregnant woman who received services. This study provides new analysis and evidence on the implementation of innovative care and financing models in resource-limited settings.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Social Responsibility
- Public-Private Sector Partnerships
- Prospective Studies
- Prenatal Care
- Pregnancy
- Nepal
- Maternal Health Services
- Infant, Newborn
- Infant Mortality
- Infant
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Social Responsibility
- Public-Private Sector Partnerships
- Prospective Studies
- Prenatal Care
- Pregnancy
- Nepal
- Maternal Health Services
- Infant, Newborn
- Infant Mortality
- Infant