Too much care? private health care sector and surgical interventions during childbirth in India
Abstract
This paper evaluates the role of the private sector in performing one of the common surgical
interventions, i.e. caesarean sections during childbirth in India. We use the latest round of National
Family Health Survey to estimate the differential probability of C-section in private medical facilities
relative to government facilities. We employ two estimation techniques, Household Fixed Effects and
Coarsened Exact Matching, to reduce the extent of selection bias in the choice of delivery location.
We also take advantage of a new question introduced in the survey which allows identification of
planned C-sections which are more likely to be the result of either demand for C-section or
unobservable (in the data) medical risks. We find that the probability of an unplanned C-section is
13.5-14 percentage points higher in the private sector. Given that some of the planned C-sections
could be a result of supplier-induced demand, this is a very conservative estimate. Our results suggest
that there were potentially 0.9 million preventable C-sections in the private sector in 2016. These
results therefore call for a critical assessment of the role of private sector in healthcare in the context
of inadequate public provision, expanding private provision and weak governance structures.
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