scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Poverty and access to health care in developing countries.

TLDR
This article documents disparities in access to health services in low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs), using a framework incorporating quality, geographic accessibility, availability, financial accessibility, and acceptability of services.
Abstract
People in poor countries tend to have less access to health services than those in better-off countries, and within countries, the poor have less access to health services. This article documents disparities in access to health services in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), using a framework incorporating quality, geographic accessibility, availability, financial accessibility, and acceptability of services. Whereas the poor in LMICs are consistently at a disadvantage in each of the dimensions of access and their determinants, this need not be the case. Many different approaches are shown to improve access to the poor, using targeted or universal approaches, engaging government, nongovernmental, or commercial organizations, and pursuing a wide variety of strategies to finance and organize services. Key ingredients of success include concerted efforts to reach the poor, engaging communities and disadvantaged people, encouraging local adaptation, and careful monitoring of effects on the poor. Yet governments in LMICs rarely focus on the poor in their policies or the implementation or monitoring of health service strategies. There are also new innovations in financing, delivery, and regulation of health services that hold promise for improving access to the poor, such as the use of health equity funds, conditional cash transfers, and coproduction and regulation of health services. The challenge remains to find ways to ensure that vulnerable populations have a say in how strategies are developed, implemented, and accounted for in ways that demonstrate improvements in access by the poor.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Development as Freedom

Journal ArticleDOI

Patient-centred access to health care: conceptualising access at the interface of health systems and populations

TL;DR: This paper explains the comprehensiveness and dynamic nature of this conceptualisation of access to care and identifies relevant determinants that can have an impact on access from a multilevel perspective where factors related to health systems, institutions, organisations and providers are considered with factors at the individual, household, community, and population levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Addressing access barriers to health services: an analytical framework for selecting appropriate interventions in low-income Asian countries

TL;DR: An overview of the various dimensions of barriers to access to health care in low-income countries (geographical access, availability, affordability and acceptability) is provided and existing interventions designed to overcome these barriers are outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic review of barriers to surgical care in low-income and middle-income countries.

TL;DR: Key barriers included difficulty accessing surgical services due to distance, poor roads, and lack of suitable transport; lack of local resources and expertise; direct and indirect costs related to surgical care; and fear of undergoing surgery and anesthesia.
References
More filters
Book

Development as Freedom

Amartya Sen
TL;DR: In this paper, Amartya Sen quotes the eighteenth century poet William Cowper on freedom: Freedom has a thousand charms to show, That slaves howe'er contented, never know.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development as Freedom

Journal ArticleDOI

The inverse care law

Julian Tudor Hart
- 27 Feb 1971 - 
TL;DR: The market distribution of medical care is a primitive and historically outdated social form, and any return to it would further exaggerate the maldistribution of medical resources.

World development report 2000/2001 : attacking poverty

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the dimensions of poverty and how to create a better world, free of poverty, and explore the nature, and evolution of poverty to present a framework for action.
Journal ArticleDOI

The concept of access: definition and relationship to consumer satisfaction.

R Penchansky, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1981 - 
TL;DR: Results provide strong support for the view that differentiation does exist among the five areas and that the measures do relate to the phenomena with which they are identified.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
Do Poor Countries Really Need More Health Care?

The answer to the query is not explicitly mentioned in the paper. The word "countries" is mentioned in the paper, but it is not used in the context of whether poor countries need more health care. The provided paper discusses disparities in access to health services in low- and middle-income countries and strategies to improve access for the poor.