Technical and scale efficiency in health service production in Kenya: subnational analysis of 47 county governments in 2022

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Abstract

Introduction

Kenya adopted a decentralized health system as part of the efforts to improve access, eliminate inequalities and make progress towards universal health coverage (UHC). With significant investments, county governments are charged with the responsibility of delivering healthcare to their population. However, questions remain about the efficiency of resource utilization to meet the health goals.

Methods

We assembled a dataset comprising health sector inputs, outputs, and contextual factors to measure the efficiency of Kenya’s health system across 47 counties in 2022. We estimated overall technical efficiency (OTE), pure technical efficiency (PTE) and scale efficiency (SE) employing Simar and Wilson’s single-step data envelopment analysis (DEA) approach. We assessed the impact of contextual factors on efficiency levels using a truncated regression model.

Results

Considering child survival as a health system output, the national average for OTE was 0.74 (95% CI:0.70-0.78), while PTE was 0.85 (95%CI:0.82-0.88) and SE was 0.87 (95%CI:0.85-0.89). Meanwhile, for childhood immunization coverage, average OTE was 0.83 (95%CI:0.81-0.87), while PTE was consistently high across the counties. For maternal survival, OTE was low at 0.51 (95%CI:0.48-0.55), and PTE was 0.61 (95%CI:0.57-0.69), with SE averaging 0.82 (95%CI:0.79-0.84). Taking healthy adjusted life expectancy (HALE) as the health system output, average OTE was 0.83 (95%CI:0.81-0.85). There was a high correlation between OTE scores that considered child survival, childhood immunization coverage and HALE as health system outputs. Efficiency scores showed a heterogenous picture across the country both at the provincial and county levels.

Conclusion

In 2022 the Kenyan health system was inefficient. Decision makers in Kenya have an opportunity to improve health outcomes without the injection of additional resources particularly through better managerial practices as pointed by low attainment in PTE. Additionally, reorganizing the scale of health programs to operate at the optimal level would yield improved efficiency.

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