Projecting the cost of essential services in Bangladesh
β Scribed by Tim Ensor; Liaquat Ali; Atia Hossain; Shawkat Ferdousi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 85 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0749-6753
- DOI
- 10.1002/hpm.701
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Utilizing a study of the costs of providing essential services in rural areas in Bangladesh projections of the cost of expanding services to the entire rural population are derived. These estimates are based on the current system of primary care, the demographic structure of the population and normatives for desired utilization. Scenarios make use of known demographic characteristics of average rural areas together with information on disease prevalence.
The estimates highlight a number of difficulties involved in deriving costs and in comparing the costβeffectiveness of service provision. The integrated nature of much primary care, both in terms of the technical exploitation of joint costs and clinical diagnostic and treatment protocols, means that treating services in isolation is likely to lead to inexact estimates of service cost. The context of any costs derived is required in order to make comparisons. Copyright Β© 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The capacity of the poor of Bangladesh to save is surprizingly large Γ surprizing to observers, and surprizing to the poor themselves. This capacity has long been used, with modest success, as the basis for self-help savings-and-loan devices that the poor (like others) have used in the absence of fo
This article presents a step-down cost analysis using secondary data sources from 26 Bangladesh non-government organizations (NGOs) providing family planning services under a US Agency for International Development-funded umbrella organization. The unit costs of the NGOs' MaternalΒ±Child Health (MCH)
## Abstract Performance of the Bakkhali and Idgaon rubber dam projects of southβeastern Bangladesh has been evaluated using some standard indicators, broadly classified into three groups: hydraulic, agricultural and socioβeconomic. For the quantitative and qualitative assessment of the indicators,
Agricultural services are considered from management and economic perspectives. Services are identified and yield forecasts used to initiate debate about the data requirement needed to provide such services. From a wider perspective, it seems that the meteorological information component is small an