Improving the timeliness of birth registration in Fiji through a financial incentive
Christine Linhart, Neel Singh, Meli Nadakuca, Varanisese Saumaka, Carlie Congdon, Sharita Serrao, Richard Taylor, Stephen Morrell

TL;DR
A financial incentive program in Fiji significantly improved the timeliness of birth registration, especially for indigenous Fijians, young mothers, and single mothers, but effects reversed when the program ended.
Contribution
This study demonstrates the effectiveness of a financial incentive program in improving birth registration timeliness in Fiji.
Findings
The mean birth-to-registration interval dropped by 81% during the PAPP program.
On-time birth registration increased from 57% to 93% during the PAPP period.
Discontinuation of the PAPP led to a sharp increase in birth-to-registration intervals across all groups.
Abstract
Fiji is a Pacific Island nation with the predominant ethnic groups indigenous Fijians (iTaukei) (62 %) and Fijians of Indian descent (31 %). This study reports on the effect of a Parental Assistance Payment Program (PAPP) tied to on-time birth registration, available in Fiji from August 2018 to July 2020. Unit record birth registration data (n = 117,829) for children born during 2016–22 were used to calculate mean birth-to-registration intervals and the likelihood of on-time birth registration (within 365 days) before the PAPP (January 2016–July 2018) compared to during the PAPP (August 2018–July 2020), by population disaggregations (sex, ethnicity, age, marital status). During the PAPP, mean birth-to-registration intervals declined sharply by 81 %, from 665 days (95 %CI: 658–671) to 124 days (121–127). The largest declines were among i-Taukei children (803 to 139 days, 83 %) compared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Maternal and Child Health · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Island Studies and Pacific Affairs
