Journal ArticleOpen Access
Making health markets work better for poor people: the case of informal providers
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Ibadan, Institute of Development Studies, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Johns Hopkins University
Published InHealth Policy and Planning
Year2011
Citations164
Abstract
There has been a dramatic spread of market relationships in many low- and middle-income countries. This spread has been much faster than the development of the institutional arrangements to influence the performance of health service providers. In many countries poor people obtain a large proportion of their outpatient medical care and drugs from informal providers working outside a regulatory framework, with deleterious consequences in terms of the safety and efficacy of treatment and its cost. Interventions that focus only on improving the knowledge of these providers have had limited impact. There is a considerable amount of experience in other sectors with interventions for improving the performance of markets that poor people use. This paper applies lessons from this experience to…
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