This paper presents a South African case study as a contribution to international debates about the policy challenges posed by health sector commercialisation. It shows that the South African health system was highly commercialised before 1994, and fragmented between the private sector, serving the high-income white population and the public sector, serving the low-income, black population. By 2005 little had changed despite efforts to regulate the private sector and strengthen the public sector. Brave leadership and a stronger vision of the relative roles of public and private sectors is required to develop an integrated health system built on income-related cross-subsidies. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
The World Health Assembly passed a resolution on the importance of engaging with the private health ...
Prior 1994 South Africa had a fragmented health system designed along racial lines. One system was h...
The whole debate about the private-public mix in health care has its roots in basic economics princi...
Much current global debate – as well as a great deal of political rhetoric – about g...
South Africa is a society characterised by deep inequalities structured along racial, geographical a...
This working paper presents information and analyses of health care inequity in South Africa, with s...
The effects of commercialised health care in embedding, exacerbating and legitimating social and eco...
Over the past decade, international health policy debates have been dominated by efficiency consider...
This paper reports on a study which explores the role of Public Private Partnerships PPPs as viable ...
M.Comm.PPPs have developed out of a realisation by governments that in order to improve health syste...
Recent political developments in South Africa provide many opportunities for the development and ext...
The South African Government has made accessibility and equity the primary focus of its health polic...
International evidence shows that, if poorly regulated, the private health sector may lead to distor...
M.Com. (Business Management)It is a well established fact that the majority of South Africans do not...
South Africa faces a major crisis in terms of human resources for health. There is a shortage within...
The World Health Assembly passed a resolution on the importance of engaging with the private health ...
Prior 1994 South Africa had a fragmented health system designed along racial lines. One system was h...
The whole debate about the private-public mix in health care has its roots in basic economics princi...
Much current global debate – as well as a great deal of political rhetoric – about g...
South Africa is a society characterised by deep inequalities structured along racial, geographical a...
This working paper presents information and analyses of health care inequity in South Africa, with s...
The effects of commercialised health care in embedding, exacerbating and legitimating social and eco...
Over the past decade, international health policy debates have been dominated by efficiency consider...
This paper reports on a study which explores the role of Public Private Partnerships PPPs as viable ...
M.Comm.PPPs have developed out of a realisation by governments that in order to improve health syste...
Recent political developments in South Africa provide many opportunities for the development and ext...
The South African Government has made accessibility and equity the primary focus of its health polic...
International evidence shows that, if poorly regulated, the private health sector may lead to distor...
M.Com. (Business Management)It is a well established fact that the majority of South Africans do not...
South Africa faces a major crisis in terms of human resources for health. There is a shortage within...
The World Health Assembly passed a resolution on the importance of engaging with the private health ...
Prior 1994 South Africa had a fragmented health system designed along racial lines. One system was h...
The whole debate about the private-public mix in health care has its roots in basic economics princi...