Workable Social Health Insurance Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa


Book Description

1, 2017 Organization of the Article This article examines how social health insurance can be made workable in spite of the challenges facing the idea by drawing on the experiences of four countries in sub-Saharan Africa in the administration of health insurance. [...] Although the ascendancy of the market economy, the trend towards minimalist government, a poor economic outlook and different interpretations of the role of the African state (as outlined by Kawabata 2006, for example) have combined to gradually alter the roles of government in the developing world, and Africa in particular, the importance of government as an organizer, implementer and regulator o. [...] a powerful equalizer that abolishes distinctions between the rich and the poor, the privileged and the marginalized, the young and the old, ethnic groups, and women and men (Chan 2012). [...] Depth of coverage corresponds to the number and quality of services and assesses the range of health services available to meet the healthcare needs of covered populations. [...] Strong political leadership also featured in the cases of South Africa and Nigeria, although for the former, the apartheid root of the health insurance system deprived the scheme of equity as a key UHC objective, which has not been redressed in the post-apartheid period.




Contemporary Healthcare Issues in Sub-Saharan Africa


Book Description

Contemporary Healthcare Issues in Sub-Saharan Africa: Social, Economic, and Cultural Perspectives discusses contemporary healthcare issues in Sub-Saharan Africa to identify deficiencies in the system and provide workable recommendations for strengthening healthcare delivery on the continent. Contributors address topical issues such as drug quality, malaria control, health insurance, geriatric care, and the environment-health nexus. The contributors also study intimate partner violence and maternal-child health, food safety, prevalence of childhood tuberculosis, and cardiovascular diseases. This book provides in-depth analyses of current issues in Sub-Saharan Africa that blend theory and practice. The diverse group of contributors includes experts in clinical medicine, pharmacy, economics, anthropology, public health, and the social sciences.




Health Insurance in Sub-Saharan Africa


Book Description

The middle class, not the poor, benefit from the little health care insurance that exists in Sub-Saharan Africa. Encouraging the development of private health care insurance could free up more funds for the poor. Prepaid capitated health insurance will encourage efficiency by health providers ; deductibles and coinsurance will have similar effects on health consumers.




Handbook of Micro Health Insurance in Africa


Book Description

Micro health insurance is an emerging concept to reduce poverty and social exclusion and improve health care access. The Handbook of Micro Health Insurance in Africa gives an overview of the challenges and needs in the field of micro health insurance. Focusing on Sub-Saharan Africa, where universal social health protection still has a way to go, the Handbook provides an introduction to the relatively new and promising approach of micro insurance as a risk management tool for low-income households, between the market, self-help, and the state. This book is an output of the project Pro MHI Africa, which is funded by the European Union and directed by the University of Cologne in cooperation with the University of Botswana, the University of Ghana, and the University of Malawi. (Series: Social Protection in Health. Challenges, Needs and Solutions in International Health Care Financing - Vol. 1)




Social Health Insurance for Developing Nations


Book Description

Specialist groups have often advised health ministers and other decision makers in developing countries on the use of social health insurance (SHI) as a way of mobilizing revenue for health, reforming health sector performance, and providing universal coverage. This book reviews the specific design and implementation challenges facing SHI in low- and middle-income countries and presents case studies on Ghana, Kenya, Philippines, Colombia, and Thailand.




Health Systems Financing


Book Description

"This World Health Report was produced under the overall direction of Carissa Etienne ... and Anarfi Asamoa Baah ... The principal writers were David B. Evans ... [et al] -- t.p. verso.




Informal and Formal Social Protection Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa


Book Description

"Addressing several themes in the social protection literature, this book makes an original and important contribution to the rapidly growing body of literature on social protection in sub-Saharan Africa. Some of the themes are relatively neglected or under-researched, while some others are not usually conceptualised as social protection. These themes are organized around the major issues: informal social protection, urban social protection, social protection and physical security, social protection in unstable contexts, climate change, pastoralism, and gender"--Back cover.







Historical Perspectives on the State of Health and Health Systems in Africa, Volume II


Book Description

This book focuses on Africa’s challenges, achievements, and failures over the past several centuries using an interdisciplinary approach that combines theory and fact and evidence-based practices and interventions in public health, and argues that most of the health problems in Africa are not a result of scarce or lack of resources, but of the misconceived and misplaced priorities that have left the continent behind every other on the globe in terms of health, education, and equitable distribution of opportunities and access to (quality) health as agreed by the United Nations member states at Alma-Ata in 1978.