India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor
This is a study of how well health and related services provided by a large, prominent Indian non-governmental organization have reached the very poor. The Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) is a trade union of informal women workers loc...
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/5363632/india-assessing-reach-three-sewa-health-services-among-poor http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13745 |
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okr-10986-137452021-04-23T14:03:09Z India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor Ranson, M. Kent Joshi, Palak Shah, Mittal Shaikh, Yasmin CHILD HEALTH CHILD MORTALITY COMMUNITIES DISABILITY DISEASES DISTRICTS DOCTORS DWELLING ECONOMIC STATUS EMPLOYMENT EQUALITY EXPENDITURES FAMILY HEALTH FAMILY PLANNING FAMILY STRUCTURE FIRST AID HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE PROVISION HEALTH CARE SECTOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH EDUCATION HEALTH POLICY HEALTH SERVICES HOMES HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RESOURCES HYGIENE IMMUNIZATION INPATIENT CARE MANAGERS MARKETING MEDICINES MENTAL HEALTH MORBIDITY NGOS NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS NURSES NUTRITION PATIENTS PHYSICIANS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE SECTOR PROBABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH CARE PUBLIC SECTOR REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RURAL AREAS RURAL WOMEN SLUMS TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL URBAN AREAS URBAN HEALTH VILLAGES WORKERS This is a study of how well health and related services provided by a large, prominent Indian non-governmental organization have reached the very poor. The Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) is a trade union of informal women workers located in Gujerat State. The services are three primary components of SEWA's health program: its mobile reproductive health camps, tuberculosis detection and treatment program, and women's education program. The project's quantitative component compared the economic status of women attending each of the three services with that of the general population. Information about the economic status of approximately 1,500 women attending the services was collected through interviews at service provision sites. Information on the general population's economic situation came from pre-existing household data sets: a Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), and a survey by SEWA's insurance project. In urban areas, all three SEWA services were used predominantly by people from poorer households; about half the clients of each service belonged to the poorest third of the population. In rural areas, the economic status of those who used the two services offered (reproductive health and women's education) did not differ significantly from that of the general population. The project's qualitative component featured focus group discussions about the reasons why the services did or did not reach the poor groups for whom they were designed. In urban areas, the reasons identified for the services' attractiveness to the poor included proximity, delivery (in part) by the poor themselves, promotion efforts in poor communities, relatively low cost, and SEWA's favorable reputation. The barriers identified in rural areas were the timing of service, which coincided with working hours, and the services' perceived high cost. 2013-06-04T20:21:14Z 2013-06-04T20:21:14Z 2004-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/5363632/india-assessing-reach-three-sewa-health-services-among-poor http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13745 English en_US HNP discussion paper; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research South Asia India |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
CHILD HEALTH CHILD MORTALITY COMMUNITIES DISABILITY DISEASES DISTRICTS DOCTORS DWELLING ECONOMIC STATUS EMPLOYMENT EQUALITY EXPENDITURES FAMILY HEALTH FAMILY PLANNING FAMILY STRUCTURE FIRST AID HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE PROVISION HEALTH CARE SECTOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH EDUCATION HEALTH POLICY HEALTH SERVICES HOMES HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RESOURCES HYGIENE IMMUNIZATION INPATIENT CARE MANAGERS MARKETING MEDICINES MENTAL HEALTH MORBIDITY NGOS NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS NURSES NUTRITION PATIENTS PHYSICIANS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE SECTOR PROBABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH CARE PUBLIC SECTOR REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RURAL AREAS RURAL WOMEN SLUMS TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL URBAN AREAS URBAN HEALTH VILLAGES WORKERS |
spellingShingle |
CHILD HEALTH CHILD MORTALITY COMMUNITIES DISABILITY DISEASES DISTRICTS DOCTORS DWELLING ECONOMIC STATUS EMPLOYMENT EQUALITY EXPENDITURES FAMILY HEALTH FAMILY PLANNING FAMILY STRUCTURE FIRST AID HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE PROVISION HEALTH CARE SECTOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH EDUCATION HEALTH POLICY HEALTH SERVICES HOMES HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RESOURCES HYGIENE IMMUNIZATION INPATIENT CARE MANAGERS MARKETING MEDICINES MENTAL HEALTH MORBIDITY NGOS NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS NURSES NUTRITION PATIENTS PHYSICIANS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE SECTOR PROBABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH CARE PUBLIC SECTOR REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RURAL AREAS RURAL WOMEN SLUMS TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL URBAN AREAS URBAN HEALTH VILLAGES WORKERS Ranson, M. Kent Joshi, Palak Shah, Mittal Shaikh, Yasmin India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor |
geographic_facet |
South Asia India |
relation |
HNP discussion paper; |
description |
This is a study of how well health and
related services provided by a large, prominent Indian
non-governmental organization have reached the very poor.
The Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) is a trade
union of informal women workers located in Gujerat State.
The services are three primary components of SEWA's
health program: its mobile reproductive health camps,
tuberculosis detection and treatment program, and
women's education program. The project's
quantitative component compared the economic status of women
attending each of the three services with that of the
general population. Information about the economic status of
approximately 1,500 women attending the services was
collected through interviews at service provision sites.
Information on the general population's economic
situation came from pre-existing household data sets: a
Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), and a survey by
SEWA's insurance project. In urban areas, all three
SEWA services were used predominantly by people from poorer
households; about half the clients of each service belonged
to the poorest third of the population. In rural areas, the
economic status of those who used the two services offered
(reproductive health and women's education) did not
differ significantly from that of the general population.
The project's qualitative component featured focus
group discussions about the reasons why the services did or
did not reach the poor groups for whom they were designed.
In urban areas, the reasons identified for the
services' attractiveness to the poor included
proximity, delivery (in part) by the poor themselves,
promotion efforts in poor communities, relatively low cost,
and SEWA's favorable reputation. The barriers
identified in rural areas were the timing of service, which
coincided with working hours, and the services'
perceived high cost. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
Ranson, M. Kent Joshi, Palak Shah, Mittal Shaikh, Yasmin |
author_facet |
Ranson, M. Kent Joshi, Palak Shah, Mittal Shaikh, Yasmin |
author_sort |
Ranson, M. Kent |
title |
India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor |
title_short |
India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor |
title_full |
India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor |
title_fullStr |
India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor |
title_full_unstemmed |
India : Assessing the Reach of Three SEWA Health Services among the Poor |
title_sort |
india : assessing the reach of three sewa health services among the poor |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/5363632/india-assessing-reach-three-sewa-health-services-among-poor http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13745 |
_version_ |
1764424228002594816 |