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Indigence and access to health care in sub-Saharan Africa

✍ Scribed by Friedeger Stierle; Miloud Kaddar; Anastase Tchicaya; Bergis Schmidt-Ehry


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
177 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0749-6753

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Access to health care services for the poor and indigent is hampered by current policies of health care ®nancing in sub-Saharan Africa. This paper reviews the issue as it is discussed in the international literature. No real strategies seem to exist for covering the health care of the indigent. Frequently, de®nitions of poverty and indigence are imprecise, the assessment of indigence is dicult for conceptual and technical reasons, and, therefore, the actual extent of indigence in Africa is not well known. Explicit policies rarely exist, and systematic evaluation of experiences is scarce. Results in terms of adequately identifying the indigent, and of mechanisms to improve indigents' access to health care, are rather deceiving. Policies to reduce poverty, and improve indigents' access to health care, seem to pursue strategies of depoliticizing the issue of social injustice and inequities. The problem is treated in a technical' manner, identifying and implementing operational' measures of social assistance. This approach, however, cannot resolve the problem of social exclusion, and, consequently, the problem of excluding large parts of African populations from modern health care. Therefore, this approach has to be integrated into a more `political' approach which is interested in the process of impoverishment, and which addresses the macro-economic and social causes of poverty and inequity.


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