Financial incentives and coverage of child health interventions: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Financial incentives and coverage of child health interventions: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Abstract
Financial incentives are widely used strategies to alleviate poverty, foster development, and improve health. Cash transfer programs, microcredit, user fee removal policies and voucher schemes that provide direct or indirect monetary incentives to households have been used for decades in Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, and more recently in Southeast Asia. Until now, no systematic review of the impact of financial incentives on coverage and uptake of health interventions targeting children under 5 years of age has been conducted. The objective of this review is to provide estimates on the effect of six types of financial incentive programs: (i) Unconditional cash transfers (CT), (ii) Conditional cash transfers (CCT), (iii) Microcredit (MC), (iv) Conditional Microcredit (CMC), (v) Voucher schemes (VS) and (vi) User fee removal (UFR) on the uptake and coverage of health interventions targeting children under the age of five years.
Publication
BMC Public Health
Volume
13
Issue
3
Pages
S30
Date
2013-09-17
Journal Abbr
BMC Public Health
Language
en
ISSN
1471-2458
Short Title
Financial incentives and coverage of child health interventions
Accessed
24/09/2020, 15:06
Library Catalogue
Springer Link
Citation
Bassani, D. G., Arora, P., Wazny, K., Gaffey, M. F., Lenters, L., & Bhutta, Z. A. (2013). Financial incentives and coverage of child health interventions: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Public Health, 13(3), S30. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-13-S3-S30