D. Hubacher et al., Increasing efficiency to meet future demand: Family manning services provided by the Mexican Ministry of Health, INT FAM PL, 25(3), 1999, pp. 119
Context: With fewer external funds for family planning programs and a growi
ng reliance on the public sector for services, developing countries will ne
ed to find new resources if they are to maintain existing levels of service
. By estimating the costs of services and evaluating the service delivery s
ystem for inefficiencies, a better understanding of future resource needs c
an be achieved.
Methods: Data for this study were collected in 1996 at 82 Mexican Ministry
of Health facilities, which included observations of providers and ancillar
y information for estimating costs of services. The cost per minute of prov
ider labor was used to estimate the cost of various types of family plannin
g visits and the cost per couple-year of protection for different contracep
tive methods. Some service delivery parameters were modified hypothetically
to estimate the effects on costs.
Results: Mexico's Ministry of Health is currently spending approximately $2
9 per person per year on contraceptive services. As demand increases, the s
ystem can be made more efficient by increasing the length of providers' wor
kday and the proportion of time they spend with clients, and by dispensing
more contraceptive protection at each visit. Increasing the proportion of t
ime a provider spends with clients will reduce the cost per couple-year of
protection for all methods. Doubling the number of pill cycles distributed
during a visit reduces the cost per couple-year of protection from $27 to $
19. Providing twice as many condoms per visit reduces the overall cost per
couple-year of protection from $29 to $19. If providers lengthen their work
day increase the amount of time they spend with clients and dispense more c
ontraceptives during a visit, the overall cost per couple-year of protectio
n would decline from the 1995 level of $29 to $22 by 2010.
Conclusions: Correcting the service delivery inefficiencies that exist in t
heir current system should enable the Mexican Ministry of Health to meet th
e rising demand for services without expanding current programs through the
next decade.