Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care
Much of the primary curative care provided to the poor by the private sector occurs not at large hospitals but at small, single-person clinics. While such micro-health providers increase access, questions persist about quality. Some have argued tha...
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okr-10986-236572021-04-23T14:04:16Z Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care Coarasa, Jorge Das, Jishnu AGED AGING CLINICS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DISSEMINATION DOCTORS DRUGS EQUILIBRIUM FAMILIES FEE-FOR-SERVICE FINANCIAL INCENTIVE GLOBAL HEALTH HEALTH AFFAIRS HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE DELIVERY HEALTH CARE FACILITIES HEALTH CARE MARKETS HEALTH CARE OUTCOMES HEALTH CARE PROVIDER HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS HEALTH CARE PROVISION HEALTH CARE QUALITY HEALTH CARE SECTOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH FUNDING HEALTH ORGANIZATION HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH PROVIDERS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEMS HEALTH-CARE HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HYPERTENSION ILLNESSES IMPORTANT POLICY INCOME INFORMAL SECTOR INTERVENTIONS LEVELS OF KNOWLEDGE LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MARKET FAILURES MEDICAL CARE MEDICAL DOCTOR MEDICAL TRAINING MINISTRY OF HEALTH NURSES OFFICIAL POLICY PATIENT PATIENTS PHARMACISTS POLICY DISCUSSIONS POLICY LEVER POOR HEALTH POPULATION DENSITY PRACTITIONERS PRIMARY CARE PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE CARE PRIVATE CLINICS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC PROVIDERS PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY CARE QUALITY OF CARE QUALITY OF HEALTH QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE SAFETY SERVICE PROVIDERS SURGERY TRAFFIC URBAN AREAS VILLAGE LEVEL VILLAGES WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Much of the primary curative care provided to the poor by the private sector occurs not at large hospitals but at small, single-person clinics. While such micro-health providers increase access, questions persist about quality. Some have argued that the micro-health sector needs to be better regulated. This note cites recent studies in arguing that the micro-health sector needs to be better understood. A more evidence based approach may enable the World Bank Group to better target investments and interventions and help these providers fulfill an important role serving the poor. The following recommendations are made at the conclusion of this paper: (1) Effort, rather than hardware or training, may count the most. (2) Scaling up interventions to improve quality requires understanding and addressing market failures. (3) Changing the way impacts are measured will lead to smarter investments. 2016-01-14T19:52:05Z 2016-01-14T19:52:05Z 2015-01 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/01/24016883/primary-care-poor-potential-micro-health-markets-improve-care http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23657 English en_US Viewpoint;No. 345 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
AGED AGING CLINICS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DISSEMINATION DOCTORS DRUGS EQUILIBRIUM FAMILIES FEE-FOR-SERVICE FINANCIAL INCENTIVE GLOBAL HEALTH HEALTH AFFAIRS HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE DELIVERY HEALTH CARE FACILITIES HEALTH CARE MARKETS HEALTH CARE OUTCOMES HEALTH CARE PROVIDER HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS HEALTH CARE PROVISION HEALTH CARE QUALITY HEALTH CARE SECTOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH FUNDING HEALTH ORGANIZATION HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH PROVIDERS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEMS HEALTH-CARE HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HYPERTENSION ILLNESSES IMPORTANT POLICY INCOME INFORMAL SECTOR INTERVENTIONS LEVELS OF KNOWLEDGE LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MARKET FAILURES MEDICAL CARE MEDICAL DOCTOR MEDICAL TRAINING MINISTRY OF HEALTH NURSES OFFICIAL POLICY PATIENT PATIENTS PHARMACISTS POLICY DISCUSSIONS POLICY LEVER POOR HEALTH POPULATION DENSITY PRACTITIONERS PRIMARY CARE PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE CARE PRIVATE CLINICS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC PROVIDERS PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY CARE QUALITY OF CARE QUALITY OF HEALTH QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE SAFETY SERVICE PROVIDERS SURGERY TRAFFIC URBAN AREAS VILLAGE LEVEL VILLAGES WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION |
spellingShingle |
AGED AGING CLINICS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DISSEMINATION DOCTORS DRUGS EQUILIBRIUM FAMILIES FEE-FOR-SERVICE FINANCIAL INCENTIVE GLOBAL HEALTH HEALTH AFFAIRS HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE DELIVERY HEALTH CARE FACILITIES HEALTH CARE MARKETS HEALTH CARE OUTCOMES HEALTH CARE PROVIDER HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS HEALTH CARE PROVISION HEALTH CARE QUALITY HEALTH CARE SECTOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH FUNDING HEALTH ORGANIZATION HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH PROVIDERS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEMS HEALTH-CARE HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HYPERTENSION ILLNESSES IMPORTANT POLICY INCOME INFORMAL SECTOR INTERVENTIONS LEVELS OF KNOWLEDGE LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MARKET FAILURES MEDICAL CARE MEDICAL DOCTOR MEDICAL TRAINING MINISTRY OF HEALTH NURSES OFFICIAL POLICY PATIENT PATIENTS PHARMACISTS POLICY DISCUSSIONS POLICY LEVER POOR HEALTH POPULATION DENSITY PRACTITIONERS PRIMARY CARE PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE CARE PRIVATE CLINICS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC PROVIDERS PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY CARE QUALITY OF CARE QUALITY OF HEALTH QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE SAFETY SERVICE PROVIDERS SURGERY TRAFFIC URBAN AREAS VILLAGE LEVEL VILLAGES WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Coarasa, Jorge Das, Jishnu Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care |
relation |
Viewpoint;No. 345 |
description |
Much of the primary curative care
provided to the poor by the private sector occurs not at
large hospitals but at small, single-person clinics. While
such micro-health providers increase access, questions
persist about quality. Some have argued that the
micro-health sector needs to be better regulated. This note
cites recent studies in arguing that the micro-health sector
needs to be better understood. A more evidence based
approach may enable the World Bank Group to better target
investments and interventions and help these providers
fulfill an important role serving the poor. The following
recommendations are made at the conclusion of this paper:
(1) Effort, rather than hardware or training, may count the
most. (2) Scaling up interventions to improve quality
requires understanding and addressing market failures. (3)
Changing the way impacts are measured will lead to smarter investments. |
format |
Brief |
author |
Coarasa, Jorge Das, Jishnu |
author_facet |
Coarasa, Jorge Das, Jishnu |
author_sort |
Coarasa, Jorge |
title |
Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care |
title_short |
Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care |
title_full |
Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care |
title_fullStr |
Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care |
title_full_unstemmed |
Primary Care for the Poor : The Potential of Micro-Health Markets to Improve Care |
title_sort |
primary care for the poor : the potential of micro-health markets to improve care |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/01/24016883/primary-care-poor-potential-micro-health-markets-improve-care http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23657 |
_version_ |
1764454455910072320 |