(In)Equity and Primary Health Care: The Case of Costa Rica and Panama.

0 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Madeline Baird
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The 1970s marked a significant opportunity for improving primary health care globally. Yet, political will and widescale investment to achieve "health for all" vastly diverged in countries across the Americas in the decades that followed. Distinct ideologies and models of health care emerged following commitments to social investment, equity, and community participation at Alma-Ata. In the 1970s, Costa Rica scaled up its national health system and increased broad social investment. In Panama, the establishment of the Ministry of Health in 1969 coincided with broad state investment in primary health care, yet the emergence of neoliberal models based on efficiency and privatization in the decades that followed undermined efforts toward health equity. Models of state-sanctioned investment and policies diverged in their framing of ideas about the right to health, characterized by broad social investment in Costa Rica addressing the structural factors of ill health versus financing stratified health systems and select biomedical interventions in Panama. These case studies describe the historical, political, economic, and social dimensions that account for the distinct framing of ideas about right to health and health equity and enabled Costa Rica to diverge as a country with one of the most effective health systems in the region.

(不)公平与初级卫生保健:哥斯达黎加和巴拿马的案例。
20 世纪 70 年代是全球改善初级卫生保健的重要机遇期。然而,在随后的几十年里,美洲各国在实现 "人人享有健康 "的政治意愿和大规模投资方面存在巨大差异。在阿拉木图会议上对社会投资、公平和社区参与做出承诺后,出现了不同的医疗保健意识形态和模式。20 世纪 70 年代,哥斯达黎加扩大了国家卫生系统,增加了广泛的社会投资。在巴拿马,1969 年成立卫生部的同时,国家对初级卫生保健进行了广泛投资,但在随后的几十年里,基于效率和私有化的新自由主义模式的出现破坏了为实现卫生公平所做的努力。国家认可的投资和政策模式在健康权的理念框架上存在差异,哥斯达黎加的特点是广泛的社会投资,以解决健康不良的结构性因素,而巴拿马则是资助分层的卫生系统和特定的生物医学干预措施。这些案例研究描述了历史、政治、经济和社会方面的因素,这些因素导致了健康权和健康公平理念的不同,并使哥斯达黎加成为该地区拥有最有效卫生系统的国家之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.40
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0.00%
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