This paper explores gaps and limitations in the conceptualisation, methodology and policy implications of debates about informal health care providers by examining a cross section of empirical studies. Drawing on a tradition of critical medical anthropology, we argue that existing debates hinge on a particular understanding of what constitutes appropriate knowledge and on particular expectations of how economic actors in the medical marketplace will behave
Effective delivery in the fields of development aid and healthcare relies on knowledge and its commu...
Research on patients’ choice of healthcare practitioners has focussed on countries with regulated an...
Starting from an analysis of the scientific and political uses of the concept of informal care, this...
This paper explores gaps and limitations in the conceptualisation, methodology and policy implicati...
The paper contributes to emergent literature on the institutional context of informal health service...
The dynamics of informal health markets in marginalised regions are relevant to policy discourse in ...
Informal health care providers (IPs) comprise a significant component of health systems in developin...
AbstractThe dynamics of informal health markets in marginalised regions are relevant to policy disco...
BACKGROUND: Increasing recognition of the importance of medicine sellers in low-resource settings ha...
UIDB/04038/2020 UIDP/04038/2020“eHealth” and “Precision Medicine” are two major concepts in the new...
Introduction Many studies examining the phenomena of medical tourism have identified health equity i...
This think piece draws on experiences of fieldwork in a Papua New Guinean hospital to reflect on ten...
Background: Health and well-being services, in common with many public services, cannot be delivered...
Many low and middle-income countries have pluralistic health systems with a variety of providers of ...
Rural households in India rely extensively on informal biomedical providers, who lack valid medical ...
Effective delivery in the fields of development aid and healthcare relies on knowledge and its commu...
Research on patients’ choice of healthcare practitioners has focussed on countries with regulated an...
Starting from an analysis of the scientific and political uses of the concept of informal care, this...
This paper explores gaps and limitations in the conceptualisation, methodology and policy implicati...
The paper contributes to emergent literature on the institutional context of informal health service...
The dynamics of informal health markets in marginalised regions are relevant to policy discourse in ...
Informal health care providers (IPs) comprise a significant component of health systems in developin...
AbstractThe dynamics of informal health markets in marginalised regions are relevant to policy disco...
BACKGROUND: Increasing recognition of the importance of medicine sellers in low-resource settings ha...
UIDB/04038/2020 UIDP/04038/2020“eHealth” and “Precision Medicine” are two major concepts in the new...
Introduction Many studies examining the phenomena of medical tourism have identified health equity i...
This think piece draws on experiences of fieldwork in a Papua New Guinean hospital to reflect on ten...
Background: Health and well-being services, in common with many public services, cannot be delivered...
Many low and middle-income countries have pluralistic health systems with a variety of providers of ...
Rural households in India rely extensively on informal biomedical providers, who lack valid medical ...
Effective delivery in the fields of development aid and healthcare relies on knowledge and its commu...
Research on patients’ choice of healthcare practitioners has focussed on countries with regulated an...
Starting from an analysis of the scientific and political uses of the concept of informal care, this...