Journal Design Clinical Emerald
African Food Systems Research (Interdisciplinary - incl Agri/Env) | 26 May 2026

A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of the Cost-Effectiveness of Community Health Centre Systems in Rwanda

A, l, i, n, e, M, u, k, a, m, a, n, a, ,, S, a, m, u, e, l, H, a, b, i, m, a, n, a, ,, J, e, a, n, d, e, D, i, e, u, U, w, i, m, a, n, a
Cost-effectivenessPrimary HealthcareHealth SystemsSub-Saharan Africa
Quasi-experimental design reveals causal impact of CHC enhancements on cost-effectiveness.
17% reduction in cost per DALY averted compared to standard care models.
Increased service utilization for antenatal and immunization services drove efficiency gains.
Findings support strategic investment in integrated community-level health systems.

Abstract

{ "background": "Community health centres (CHCs) are a cornerstone of primary healthcare delivery in many low-resource settings, yet robust evidence on their cost-effectiveness remains limited. This gap hinders optimal resource allocation and health system planning.", "purpose and objectives": "This study aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of Rwanda's CHC system in delivering a package of essential maternal and child health services, using a quasi-experimental design to estimate causal effects on health outcomes relative to costs incurred.", "methodology": "We employed a difference-in-differences design, exploiting the phased rollout of CHC enhancements across districts. Cost data were collected from financial records, and health outcome data were extracted from district health information systems. Cost-effectiveness was modelled using a linear regression framework: $CEi = \\beta0 + \\beta1 \\text{Treatment}i + \\beta2 \\text{Time}i + \\beta3 (\\text{Treatment}i \\times \\text{Time}i) + \\epsiloni$, where $CE_i$ is the cost per disability-adjusted life year averted in district $i$. Inference was based on cluster-robust standard errors.", "findings": "The enhanced CHC system was associated with a 17% reduction in the cost per disability-adjusted life year averted compared to standard care (95% CI: 12% to 22%). This improvement was primarily driven by increased service utilisation for antenatal care and childhood immunisation, without a proportional increase in total economic costs.", "conclusion": "The Rwandan CHC model demonstrates significant cost-effectiveness in delivering key primary healthcare services. The findings suggest that strategic investment in integrated community-level health systems can yield substantial returns in health value.", "recommendations": "Policy makers should consider the phased enhancement of CHCs as a viable strategy for improving primary healthcare efficiency. Future research should investigate the long-term sustainability and equity impacts of this model.", "key words": "cost-effectiveness analysis, primary healthcare, difference-in