The effects of commercialised health care in embedding, exacerbating and legitimating social and economic inequality are at the root of widespread and recurrent resistance to commercialisation in health. In low income developing countries suffering generalised poverty, and notably in Sub-Saharan Africa, liberalisation of largely unregulated clinical provision has created a substantially informalised, fee-for-service primary health sector which is exclusionary, low quality and under stress. This article argues against a policy assumption that health systems constitute a sector that can benefit like other commodities from liberalisation. Health care is better understood as a ‘fictional commodity’ in the Polanyian sense: inappropriate for full...
This paper discusses the present and future role of the health professions in health services delive...
Many low and middle-income countries have pluralistic health systems with a variety of providers of ...
Poor health and disease and the nature of interventions to ameliorate them typically generate opport...
This paper presents a South African case study as a contribution to international debates about the ...
This chapter contends that there is a need for more and better political economy of social policy in...
This paper addresses conceptual issues underlying the assessment and implementation of health care p...
Based on original research and analysis by a group of health policy experts and economists from acro...
Potential conflicts between health care commercialisation (promoted through health sector reform po...
Rising costs of health care provision throughout the world have provoked a vigorous debate about the...
There is some evidence in established market economies that health economics is having a positive im...
This chapter explains the concept of the commercialisation of health care and examines the impact of...
Much current global debate – as well as a great deal of political rhetoric – about g...
This paper explores the relationship between trade in health services, its liberalization, and Afric...
In the context of reemerging universalistic approaches to health care, the objective of this article...
Health care provision, like other areas of welfare, has increasingly been subject to processes of pr...
This paper discusses the present and future role of the health professions in health services delive...
Many low and middle-income countries have pluralistic health systems with a variety of providers of ...
Poor health and disease and the nature of interventions to ameliorate them typically generate opport...
This paper presents a South African case study as a contribution to international debates about the ...
This chapter contends that there is a need for more and better political economy of social policy in...
This paper addresses conceptual issues underlying the assessment and implementation of health care p...
Based on original research and analysis by a group of health policy experts and economists from acro...
Potential conflicts between health care commercialisation (promoted through health sector reform po...
Rising costs of health care provision throughout the world have provoked a vigorous debate about the...
There is some evidence in established market economies that health economics is having a positive im...
This chapter explains the concept of the commercialisation of health care and examines the impact of...
Much current global debate – as well as a great deal of political rhetoric – about g...
This paper explores the relationship between trade in health services, its liberalization, and Afric...
In the context of reemerging universalistic approaches to health care, the objective of this article...
Health care provision, like other areas of welfare, has increasingly been subject to processes of pr...
This paper discusses the present and future role of the health professions in health services delive...
Many low and middle-income countries have pluralistic health systems with a variety of providers of ...
Poor health and disease and the nature of interventions to ameliorate them typically generate opport...