CONTEXT: Following new government and donor mandates, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in Bangladesh have changed their strategy for providing family planning and other basic health services. The new service delivery model relies on clinics and satellite clinics, and provides contraceptives through village depots instead of doorstep distribution. The new model expands the range of services and emphasizes quality, but also entails higher costs for clients because of its emphasis on cost recovery.
METHODS: To examine client and community reactions to the program changes, qualitative data were collected at three rural and two urban sites through in-depth, individual interviews with clients, their husbands, other community members and service providers; group interviews; and observations in clinics and satellite clinics. The researchers use this information to examine responses to the new model of health care provision in the light of health-seeking strategies commonly used by the poor, and analyze continuing barriers to access and constraints to cost recovery, including gender and poverty.
RESULTS: The tension between the mandate to recover costs and the mandate to provide services to the poor presents difficulties for clinic staff. Staff did not provide fee waivers openly and systematically, for fear that this would raise concerns about fairness and make it difficult to enforce the posted prices for the majority of clients. Clients often interpreted fee waivers as personal favors rather than something to which they were entitled.
CONCLUSIONS: NGOs want to maximize cost recovery while making the basic services they offer accessible to most people. The findings suggest that a transparent system for providing credit and fee exemptions based on need would help NGOs achieve these goals.
International Family Planning Perspectives, 2002, 28(4):196-204