4.4 Article

Purchasing for high-quality care using National Health Insurance: evidence from Zambia

Journal

HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING
Volume 38, Issue 6, Pages 681-688

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czad022

Keywords

Health insurance; quality of care; purchasing; health financing; Zambia

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Improving the quality of care is crucial for achieving universal health coverage, and health financing arrangements provide opportunities to incentivize improvements. This study examines the impact of Zambia's new National Health Insurance on equitable access to high-quality care. The findings suggest that the insurance could enhance financial resources for higher levels of care, improve access to costly interventions, enhance patient experiences, and integrate public and private sectors.
Improving the quality of care is essential for progress towards universal health coverage. Health financing arrangements offer opportunities for governments to incentivize and reward improvements in the quality of care provided. This study examines the extent to which the purchasing arrangements established within Zambia's new National Health Insurance can improve equitable access to high-quality care. We adopt the Strategic Purchasing Progress and the Lancet Commission for High-Quality Health Systems frameworks to critically examine the broader health system and the purchasing dimensions of this insurance scheme and its implications for quality care. We reviewed policy documents and conducted 31 key-informant interviews with stakeholders at national, subnational and health facility levels. We find that the new health insurance could boost financial resources in higher levels of care, improve access to high-cost interventions, improve care experiences for its beneficiaries and integrate the public and private sectors. Our findings also suggest that health insurance will likely improve some aspects of structural quality but may not be able to influence process and outcome measures of quality. It is also not clear if health insurance will improve the efficiency of service delivery and whether the benefits realized will be distributed equitably. These potential limitations are attributable to the existing governance and financial challenges, low investments in primary care and shortcomings in the design and implementation of the purchasing arrangements of health insurance. Although Zambia has made progress in a short span, there is a need to improve its provider payment mechanisms, and monitoring and accounting for a higher quality of care.

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