Supply-side solutions to health-care provision dominate the South African debate about health care. These solutions are often premised on views that health resources are too concentrated in the private health sector – which supposedly serves only a small minority of the population – and thus public sector provision needs to be expanded. We argue that this rests on a lack of understanding of the nature of the demand for health services. This paper estimates the determinants of the demand for health care using a multinomial logit estimation. It is found that three categories of factors influence the demand for health care. Firstly, demographic and locational variables are significant (e.g. income group, race and where the respondent lives). S...
Background. Since 1994, considerable progress has been made in transforming the South African healt...
South Africa possesses a highly fragmented health system with wide disparities in health spending an...
BACKGROUND: In South Africa, private hospitals absorb a high proportion of the total health expendit...
In order to achieve an ‘optimal health system’ health policies should not only be focused on the sup...
Abstract: This article investigates the determinants of demand for private health care in South Afri...
In order to achieve an 'optimal health system', health policies should not only be focused on the su...
The lack of critical distinction between the public and the private health sectors and what they rep...
This working paper presents information and analyses of health care inequity in South Africa, with s...
Rationale: In a highly unequal setting such as South Africa, differences in healthcare demand underp...
Masters of Population Studies. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2016.The study aims to understand...
The study aimed to investigate the drivers of demand for healthcare in South Africa 26 years after d...
Magister Commercii - MComThe aim of this mini-thesis is to investigate the factors linked to access ...
Despite expenditure levels on healthcare comparable to those of its upper-middle-income country pee...
In South Africa, differences in healthcare demand may perpetuate inequities in disease incidence, mo...
The authors recognize that social, economic and political factors play a larger role in determining ...
Background. Since 1994, considerable progress has been made in transforming the South African healt...
South Africa possesses a highly fragmented health system with wide disparities in health spending an...
BACKGROUND: In South Africa, private hospitals absorb a high proportion of the total health expendit...
In order to achieve an ‘optimal health system’ health policies should not only be focused on the sup...
Abstract: This article investigates the determinants of demand for private health care in South Afri...
In order to achieve an 'optimal health system', health policies should not only be focused on the su...
The lack of critical distinction between the public and the private health sectors and what they rep...
This working paper presents information and analyses of health care inequity in South Africa, with s...
Rationale: In a highly unequal setting such as South Africa, differences in healthcare demand underp...
Masters of Population Studies. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2016.The study aims to understand...
The study aimed to investigate the drivers of demand for healthcare in South Africa 26 years after d...
Magister Commercii - MComThe aim of this mini-thesis is to investigate the factors linked to access ...
Despite expenditure levels on healthcare comparable to those of its upper-middle-income country pee...
In South Africa, differences in healthcare demand may perpetuate inequities in disease incidence, mo...
The authors recognize that social, economic and political factors play a larger role in determining ...
Background. Since 1994, considerable progress has been made in transforming the South African healt...
South Africa possesses a highly fragmented health system with wide disparities in health spending an...
BACKGROUND: In South Africa, private hospitals absorb a high proportion of the total health expendit...