Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Biographies
- Notices
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Reviews
- Introduction: Overview and purpose
- Section 1 Paradigms of international policies
- Section 2 The failure of the aid paradigm: poor disease control in developing countries
- Section 3 Impact of international health policies on access to health in middle-income countries: some experiences from Latin America
- Section 4 Determinants and implications of new liberal health policies: the case of India, China and Lebanon
- Section 5 Principles for alternative, publicly oriented health care policies, planning, management and delivery
- Section 6 A public health, strategic toolkit to implement these alternatives
- Conclusions
- Glossary
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Biographies
- Notices
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Reviews
- Introduction: Overview and purpose
- Section 1 Paradigms of international policies
- Section 2 The failure of the aid paradigm: poor disease control in developing countries
- Section 3 Impact of international health policies on access to health in middle-income countries: some experiences from Latin America
- Section 4 Determinants and implications of new liberal health policies: the case of India, China and Lebanon
- Section 5 Principles for alternative, publicly oriented health care policies, planning, management and delivery
- Section 6 A public health, strategic toolkit to implement these alternatives
- Conclusions
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
This book explores health policies through examining patterns of commercialization that have underpinned the vast majority of these policies in different regions of the world, at the same time providing the reader with both concepts in public health and techniques to develop health services with a social mission. The chapters in the book include case studies and an extensive review of the literature.
We began this task with one main purpose: to explore the extent to which donors and international agencies have, over the past two decades, shared the same underlying motivation: that is to primarily commercialize the health sector of low-income countries (LIC) and middle-income countries (MIC), despite the stated aim of improving access to health care and addressing issues of poverty and exclusion. In this book, we provide evidence showing the contradictions between access to care and strengthening health systems on the one hand and increased commercialization on the other.
The ideas and evidence presented in this book thus call for an exploration of the contradictions of commercialized health care delivery under the guise of maintaining public provision. The book challenges the discourse and status quo among national bodies, in global policy circles, among donors and northern governments. It argues for
– the creation of health care services that have a social rather than a commercial motivation, and
– delivery of publicly oriented health care based on (professionally defined) ‘needs’ and on the (population) ‘demand’ to access quality, polyvalent health care, rather than on health interventions efficiency only.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- International Health and Aid PoliciesThe Need for Alternatives, pp. vii - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010