Cost-effectiveness of a mentorship and quality improvement intervention to enhance the quality of antenatal care at rural health centers in Rwanda

Int J Qual Health Care. 2019 Jun 1;31(5):359-364. doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzy179.

Abstract

Objective: To estimate cost-effectiveness of Mentorship, Enhanced Supervision for Healthcare and Quality Improvement (MESH-QI) intervention to strengthen the quality of antenatal care at rural health centers in rural Rwanda.

Design: Cost-effectiveness analysis of the MESH-QI intervention using the provider perspective.

Setting: Kirehe and Rwinkwavu District Hospital catchment areas, Rwanda.

Intervention: MESH-QI.

Main outcome measures: Incremental cost per antenatal care visit with complete danger sign and vital sign assessments.

Results: The total annual costs of standard antenatal care supervision was 10 777.21 USD at the baseline, whereas the total costs of MESH-QI intervention was 19 656.53 USD. Human resources (salary and benefits) and transport drove the majority of program expenses, (44.8% and 40%, respectively). Other costs included training of mentors (12.9%), data management (6.5%) and equipment (6.5%). The incremental cost per antenatal care visit attributable to MESH-QI with all assessment items completed was 0.70 USD for danger signs and 1.10 USD for vital signs.

Conclusions: MESH-QI could be an affordable and effective intervention to improve the quality of antenatal care at health centers in low-resource settings. Cost savings would increase if MESH-QI mentors were integrated into the existing healthcare systems and deployed to sites with higher volume of antenatal care visits.

Keywords: Rwanda; antenatal care; cost-effectiveness; mentorship; quality improvement.

MeSH terms

  • Cost-Benefit Analysis*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Mentors*
  • Pregnancy
  • Prenatal Care / standards*
  • Quality Improvement / organization & administration*
  • Quality of Health Care / standards
  • Rural Health Services / standards
  • Rwanda