Maternal and child mortality remains a major public health problem in low- and middle-income countries. The rates are especially worrying in poor countries like Burkina Faso. Financial barriers to access care still prevent many families from getting the services they need, when needed, limiting future progress in reducing high mortality rates.
In 2006, Burkina Faso took various measures to improve financial accessibility to maternal and child healthcare. It introduced the policy of subsidizing emergency obstetric and neonatal care. This reduced the price of reproductive healthcare services by 80%.
Ten years later, the country went further. It introduced a national free healthcare policy. This applies to all children younger than five—regardless of the reason for the consultation—and reproductive care such as deliveries, pre- and post-natal consultations and cesarean sections.
Studies in Burkina Faso and other sub-Saharan African countries have shown the positive impacts of free healthcare. These policies improve access to healthcare, decrease catastrophic health spending and reduce health inequities. Free access to healthcare reduces self-treatment practices as well as the proportion of home deliveries.
Evidence suggests that the abolition of direct payment improves certain morbidity indicators and reduces neonatal mortality.
Despite these numerous studies, little knowledge has been gathered on the ethical issues surrounding free policies. Exploring these issues is important. There have been reports of increased tensions because the eligibility criteria can be difficult to meet. This is especially the case in contexts of high vulnerability.
We conducted a study in a rural health district (Boulsa) of Burkina Faso to explore what healthcare personnel and beneficiaries thought about compliance with the eligibility criteria. We also wanted to understand the resulting ethical issues, and how health workers and patients coped with these.
Ethical issues
All study participants were aware of the free healthcare policy. But some ambiguities remained about the eligibility criteria. For example, some mothers were unsure whether they were entitled to free postpartum care. The official limit (free postpartum care up to 42 days after delivery) was difficult to understand.
Similarly, some caregivers thought that free care included children aged five years, while it only concerns children aged 0–59 months. There was also a lack of knowledge that free healthcare was universal for children, in other words it covered all types of care, but not for the mothers, for whom only reproductive healthcare services were free. These ambiguities led to situations where patients were denied free care when they thought they were entitled to it.
Health personnel and mothers told us about deliberate practices to extend the benefits of free care to people who were not eligible.
One of the most commonly reported practices was to hide the exact age of children. This practice sometimes resulted in impersonation, when identification documents of another child under five were brought in as proof of age.
Another example was using an eligible person to receive a free consultation or medication for the benefit of someone else. Also, beneficiaries sometimes went to several different health centers to accumulate a larger supply of drugs, either to treat other family members or to build up a stockpile of drugs that could be used later.
These practices are risky because the treatment given to one person is not necessarily the same as the treatment that another family member should have. However, they are justified by the economic vulnerability of the households. Many women who are the primary caregivers have no control over the household’s finances.
Moreover, the ineligibility of older children raises ethical issues. “For example, the malaria medicine they give here, if a child is over five years old, they do not treat him, and go take another one, younger. But all children are going to get sick from malaria; they should help us with all the children.”
Healthcare workers knew these issues. They saw the lack of agency of the beneficiaries and were sensitive to the households’ economic vulnerability. This situation placed them in an ethical dilemma: they had a duty to treat and relieve the suffering of patients, but also to ensure that the official guidelines issued by the Ministry of Health were respected.
Clinicians were confronted with these dilemmas in an even more blatant manner since they often resided in the community and shared the living conditions of its members. “Sometimes you look at someone, if you see that it’s still not going well, you feel obliged to help, to include the patient in free healthcare so that they can benefit. Some patients, when they come, even five francs (US$0.01), they don’t have that.”
Healthcare workers found various ways to alleviate these ethical tensions and avoid conflicts with the community. They tried to make people aware of the dangers of giving medications to people other than those for whom they were prescribed, and they were flexible about cut-off points for eligibility. They adapted their procedures to limit circumventing practices, for example by directly observing the treatment administration and ensuring a closer follow-up of the patients.
Remaining gaps
Access to healthcare has improved for a significant proportion of the Burkinabe population. But financial barriers remain for those who are not eligible. This raises ethical concerns for caregivers in the most vulnerable households and for healthcare providers.
Practices and medical procedures were adapted to reconcile these tensions surrounding the eligibility criteria. These resulted in a local reinvention of the free healthcare policy. This made it more effective in real world conditions.
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