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Results-based financing as a strategic purchasing intervention: some progress but much further to go in Zimbabwe?

Sophie WitterYotamu ChirwaPamela ChandiwanaShungu MunyatiMildred PepukaiMaria Paola BertoneSteve Banda
Published in: BMC health services research (2020)
Our analysis suggests that RBF in Zimbabwe, at least at this early stage, is mainly functioning as an additional source of funding and as a provider payment mechanism, focussed on the primary care level for MCH services. RBF in this case brought focus to specific outputs but remained one provider payment mechanism amongst many, with limited traction over the main service delivery inputs and programmes. Zimbabwe's economic and political crisis provided an important entry point for RBF, but Zimbabwe did not present a 'blank slate' for RBF to reform: it was a functional health system pre-crisis, which enabled relatively swift scale-up of RBF but also meant that the potential for restructuring of institutional purchasing relationships was limited. This highlights the need for realistic and contextually tailored expectations of RBF.
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