1. Health, wealth and poverty in developing countries: Beyond the State, market, and civil society.
- Author
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Obeng-Odoom, Franklin
- Subjects
ECONOMICS methodology ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,CHILD mortality ,DEBATE ,DEVELOPING countries ,HEALTH status indicators ,HUMANITARIANISM ,LABOR demand ,LABOR productivity ,MATERNAL mortality ,PRACTICAL politics ,POVERTY ,PROBLEM solving ,RESOURCE allocation ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
Poor health and disease and the nature of interventions to ameliorate them typically generate opportunities and costs. What diseases are prevalent, which interventions are favoured and what factors fuel the nature of health interventions are recurrent concerns for political economists. This paper examines the prevailing viewpoints about what health policy works and what does not. Drawing on evidence from developing countries, it shows that there are many deficiencies in the prevailing orthodoxy which emphasises state, market, and civil society solutions. The paper suggests that health policy debate must be refrained around poverty and social inequality, constructs which are often subordinated to attaining grand ideological goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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