Family planning vouchers in low and middle income countries: A systematic review
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
2016
Abstract
Family planning (FP) vouchers have targeted subsidies to disadvantaged populations for quality reproductive health services since the 1960s. To summarize the effect of FP voucher programs in low- and middle-income countries, a systematic review was conducted, screening studies from 33 databases through three phases: keyword search, title and abstract review, and full text review. Sixteen articles were selected including randomized control trials, controlled before-and-after, interrupted time series analyses, cohort, and before-and-after studies. Twenty-three study outcomes were clustered around contraceptive uptake, with study outcomes including fertility in the early studies and equity and discontinuation in more recent publications. Research gaps include measures of FP quality, unintended outcomes, clients’ qualitative experiences, FP voucher integration with health systems, and issues related to scale-up of the voucher approach.
Recommended Citation
Bellows, Benjamin, Carol Bulaya, Sophie Inambwae, Craig L. Lissner, Moazzam Ali, and Ashish Bajracharya. 2016. "Family planning vouchers in low and middle income countries: A systematic review," Studies in Family Planning 47(4): 357–370.
DOI
10.1111/sifp.12006
Language
English