Overcoming Barriers to Health Service Access and Influencing the Demand Side Through Purchasing
This paper investigates the role of demand-side barriers in impeding access to the use of health services. Demand-side barriers are defined as determinants of use of health care that are not dependent on service delivery or price or direct price of...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/09/5643483/overcoming-barriers-health-service-access-influencing-demand-side-through-purchasing http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13791 |
Summary: | This paper investigates the role of
demand-side barriers in impeding access to the use of health
services. Demand-side barriers are defined as determinants
of use of health care that are not dependent on service
delivery or price or direct price of those services. They
include distance, education, opportunity cost, and cultural
and social barriers. There is some evidence that these
barriers are at least as important in determining access to
services as the quality, volume, and price of services
delivered by health care providers. The paper is divided
into two sections. In the first section literature on demand
barriers to accessing services is reviewed. Since the
literature on these barriers is so substantial, the review
is restricted to an illustrative survey of the main barriers
in low-, middle-, and high-income countries. The second
section surveys studies that report and evaluate methods for
overcoming these barriers. The literature here is
substantially less voluminous even when gray and unpublished
sources are included in the survey. Many of the studies
relate to access to obstetrical and family planning care. In
most cases evaluation is not rigorous, and it is often hard
to separate the impact of the intervention itself from other
confounding factors. Few of the studies reported have an
explicit poverty focus, although many of the interventions
are conducted in poor areas. There is a clear need for
further work to examine the most cost effective ways of
reducing barriers to accessing services and in particular to
investigate what methods are most effective in expanding
access to essential care among the poor. |
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