参与低收入和中等收入国家的卫生市场

Gerald Bloom, Annie Wilkinson, Hilary Standing, Henry Lucas
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引用次数: 9

摘要

许多低收入和中等收入国家拥有多元化的卫生系统,在培训水平、所有权(公共或私人)以及与监管系统的关系方面,卫生产品和服务的提供者种类繁多。影响其表现的制度安排的发展落后于这些市场的扩展。本文提出了一个分析多元卫生系统的框架。私营保健服务提供者与政府或代表公共利益的其他组织之间的关系,对它们在满足穷人需求方面的表现有很大影响。它们对提供服务模式的影响取决于如何管理这些关系,以及它们在多大程度上符合人民的利益。许多低收入和中等收入国家的政府面临着增加获得安全、有效和负担得起的卫生服务的压力。在经济增长的背景下,应该有可能大大改善穷人获得保健服务的机会。信息技术和低成本诊断方面的创新正在为实现这一目标创造重要的新机会。必须动员公共和私营部门提供与卫生有关的物品和服务。这将涉及所有卫生部门行为者的作用和责任的重大变化。政府、企业和民间社会组织将需要学习如何通过实验和系统地了解什么有效以及为什么有效,使多元卫生系统更好地发挥作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Engaging with Health Markets in Low and Middle-Income Countries

Many low and middle-income countries have pluralistic health systems with a variety of providers of health-related goods and services in terms of their level of training, their ownership (public or private) and their relationship with the regulatory system. The development of institutional arrangements to influence their performance has lagged behind the spread of these markets. This paper presents a framework for analysing a pluralistic health system. The relationships between private providers of health services and government, or other organisations that represent the public interest, strongly influence their performance in meeting the needs of the poor. Their impact on the pattern of service delivery depends on how the relationships are managed and the degree to which they respond to the interests of the population. Many governments of low and middle-income countries are under pressure to increase access to safe, effective and affordable health services. In a context of economic growth, it should be possible to improve access by the poor to health services substantially. Innovations in information technologies and in low cost diagnostics are creating important new opportunities for achieving this. It will be important to mobilise both public and private providers of health-related goods and services. This will involve big changes in the roles and responsibilities of all health sector actors. Governments, businesses and civil society organizations will need to learn how to make pluralist health systems work better through experimentation and systematic learning about what works and why.

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