Bhattacharyya Sanghita, Chaudhuri Chetana, Mohanty Sruti, Kaushik Urvashi
Public Health Foundation of India, New Delhi, India.
UNICEF India, New Delhi, India.
BMJ Glob Health. 2025 May 14;10(5):e012890. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2023-012890.
Over the years, conditional cash transfers (CCTs) have become a popular tool to enhance demand for, and access to, essential healthcare services. While the immediate goal of CCTs is to improve the affordability of healthcare services, these are also being used to improve all health-seeking behaviour outcomes across countries. We examined how the design, operationalisation and facilitation of maternity benefits programmes have evolved, and the advantages and challenges that accompany in low- and middle-income country settings.
A scoping review was conducted across three major electronic databases: PubMed, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature and the Cochrane library database. We also reviewed grey literature and used the snowball search approach to review the websites of numerous public health organisations and repositories. Based on set inclusion criteria and protocols, two reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts. This was followed by detailed full-text screening. Disagreements, if any, were resolved by a third researcher.
Of 235 articles identified, 65 met the inclusion criteria. These articles shed light on a wide variety of CCT design features, including benefit sizes, monitoring and compliance mechanisms, and periodicity of transfers, insights on eligibility criteria, conditionalities to be fulfilled to avail the benefits such as mandatory antenatal and postnatal checks, institutional delivery, immunisation etc. Challenges highlighted include poor awareness and low community participation and lack of agency among women in decisions about use of cash among demand-side constraints. Supply-side issues range from lack of role clarity and ownership among service providers, inefficient fund flow, and inadequate staff and infrastructure provision to tackle increased service utilisation.
CCTs have the potential to improve access to maternal and child health services, but need effective design and operational processes, which should be closely monitored. CCTs could also benefit from addressing inequities by including more women from vulnerable and lower socio-economic groups.
多年来,有条件现金转移支付(CCTs)已成为提高基本医疗服务需求和可及性的常用工具。虽然CCTs的直接目标是提高医疗服务的可负担性,但它们也被用于改善各国所有寻求医疗行为的结果。我们研究了孕产妇福利计划的设计、实施和促进方式如何演变,以及在低收入和中等收入国家背景下所伴随的优势和挑战。
在三个主要电子数据库进行了范围综述:PubMed、护理及相关健康文献累积索引和Cochrane图书馆数据库。我们还查阅了灰色文献,并采用滚雪球搜索方法查阅了众多公共卫生组织和知识库的网站。根据既定的纳入标准和方案,两名评审员独立筛选标题和摘要。随后进行详细的全文筛选。如有分歧,由第三位研究人员解决。
在识别出的235篇文章中,65篇符合纳入标准。这些文章揭示了各种各样的CCT设计特征,包括福利规模、监测和合规机制以及转移支付的周期性,关于资格标准的见解,获得福利需满足的条件,如强制性产前和产后检查、机构分娩、免疫接种等。突出的挑战包括认识不足、社区参与度低以及在需求侧限制因素中,女性在现金使用决策方面缺乏自主权。供应侧问题包括服务提供者之间角色不明确和缺乏自主权、资金流动效率低下以及工作人员和基础设施不足,难以应对服务利用率的增加。
CCTs有潜力改善孕产妇和儿童健康服务的可及性,但需要有效的设计和运营流程,并应密切监测。通过纳入更多弱势群体和社会经济地位较低群体的女性,CCTs也可从解决不平等问题中受益。