Cambodia : Using Contracting to Reduce Inequity in Primary Health Care Delivery
This study examines the equity impact of using private sector contracts for the delivery of primary health care as an alternative to traditional government provision in Cambodia. It does so by using pre- and post intervention data from a large scale contracting experiment to provide primary health c...
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creator | Schwartz, J. Brad Bhushan, Indu |
description | This study examines the equity impact of
using private sector contracts for the delivery of primary
health care as an alternative to traditional government
provision in Cambodia. It does so by using pre- and post
intervention data from a large scale contracting experiment
to provide primary health care in rural districts of
Cambodia between 1998 and 2001. Equity as well as coverage
targets for primary health care services were explicitly
included in contracts awarded in five of nine rural
districts with a population totaling over 1.25 million
people. The remaining four districts included in the test
were given identical equity and coverage targets and used
the traditional government provision of services. After
two-and-a-half years of the trial, the results suggest that
although coverage of primary health care services in all
districts had substantial increases, people in the poorest
one-half of households living in contracted districts were
more likely to receive these services than similarly
circumstanced poor people in government districts, other
factors equal. |
format | Book |
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using private sector contracts for the delivery of primary
health care as an alternative to traditional government
provision in Cambodia. It does so by using pre- and post
intervention data from a large scale contracting experiment
to provide primary health care in rural districts of
Cambodia between 1998 and 2001. Equity as well as coverage
targets for primary health care services were explicitly
included in contracts awarded in five of nine rural
districts with a population totaling over 1.25 million
people. The remaining four districts included in the test
were given identical equity and coverage targets and used
the traditional government provision of services. After
two-and-a-half years of the trial, the results suggest that
although coverage of primary health care services in all
districts had substantial increases, people in the poorest
one-half of households living in contracted districts were
more likely to receive these services than similarly
circumstanced poor people in government districts, other
factors equal.</description><language>eng</language><publisher>World Bank, Washington, DC</publisher><subject>AGED ; ANTENATAL CARE ; BIRTH SPACING ; BLOOD PRESSURE ; CHILD IMMUNIZATION ; CURATIVE HEALTH CARE ; DIARRHEA ; DISTRICTS ; ESSENTIAL DRUGS ; EXPENDITURES ; GENDER ; HEALTH CARE COVERAGE ; HEALTH CARE DELIVERY ; HEALTH CARE FACILITIES ; HEALTH CARE INDICATORS ; HEALTH CARE INFRASTRUCTURE ; HEALTH CARE SERVICE INDICATORS ; HEALTH CENTERS ; HEALTH DELIVERY ; HEALTH FACILITIES ; HEALTH SERVICES ; HOSPITALS ; HOUSEHOLDS ; HUMAN DEVELOPMENT ; IMMUNIZATION ; INCOME ; INTERVENTION ; MANAGERS ; MATERNAL HEALTH ; MEDICAL CARE ; MEDICAL SUPPLIES ; NUTRITION ; PRIMARY HEALTH CARE ; PRIMARY HEALTH CARE SERVICES ; PRIVATE SECTOR ; PROBABILITY ; PUBLIC HEALTH ; PUBLIC HEALTH CARE ; QUALITY OF CARE ; RADIO ; REHABILITATION ; RURAL AREAS ; TUBERCULOSIS ; VILLAGES ; VITAMIN A ; WEIGHT ; WORKERS</subject><creationdate>2004</creationdate><rights>CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank</rights><oa>free_for_read</oa><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><relation>HNP discussion paper</relation></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>307,780,784,787,18982</link.rule.ids><linktorsrc>$$Uhttps://hdl.handle.net/10986/13685$$EView_record_in_World_Bank$$FView_record_in_$$GWorld_Bank$$Hfree_for_read</linktorsrc></links><search><creatorcontrib>Schwartz, J. Brad</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Bhushan, Indu</creatorcontrib><title>Cambodia : Using Contracting to Reduce Inequity in Primary Health Care Delivery</title><description>This study examines the equity impact of
using private sector contracts for the delivery of primary
health care as an alternative to traditional government
provision in Cambodia. It does so by using pre- and post
intervention data from a large scale contracting experiment
to provide primary health care in rural districts of
Cambodia between 1998 and 2001. Equity as well as coverage
targets for primary health care services were explicitly
included in contracts awarded in five of nine rural
districts with a population totaling over 1.25 million
people. The remaining four districts included in the test
were given identical equity and coverage targets and used
the traditional government provision of services. After
two-and-a-half years of the trial, the results suggest that
although coverage of primary health care services in all
districts had substantial increases, people in the poorest
one-half of households living in contracted districts were
more likely to receive these services than similarly
circumstanced poor people in government districts, other
factors equal.</description><subject>AGED</subject><subject>ANTENATAL CARE</subject><subject>BIRTH SPACING</subject><subject>BLOOD PRESSURE</subject><subject>CHILD IMMUNIZATION</subject><subject>CURATIVE HEALTH CARE</subject><subject>DIARRHEA</subject><subject>DISTRICTS</subject><subject>ESSENTIAL DRUGS</subject><subject>EXPENDITURES</subject><subject>GENDER</subject><subject>HEALTH CARE COVERAGE</subject><subject>HEALTH CARE DELIVERY</subject><subject>HEALTH CARE FACILITIES</subject><subject>HEALTH CARE INDICATORS</subject><subject>HEALTH CARE INFRASTRUCTURE</subject><subject>HEALTH CARE SERVICE INDICATORS</subject><subject>HEALTH CENTERS</subject><subject>HEALTH DELIVERY</subject><subject>HEALTH FACILITIES</subject><subject>HEALTH SERVICES</subject><subject>HOSPITALS</subject><subject>HOUSEHOLDS</subject><subject>HUMAN DEVELOPMENT</subject><subject>IMMUNIZATION</subject><subject>INCOME</subject><subject>INTERVENTION</subject><subject>MANAGERS</subject><subject>MATERNAL HEALTH</subject><subject>MEDICAL CARE</subject><subject>MEDICAL SUPPLIES</subject><subject>NUTRITION</subject><subject>PRIMARY HEALTH CARE</subject><subject>PRIMARY HEALTH CARE SERVICES</subject><subject>PRIVATE SECTOR</subject><subject>PROBABILITY</subject><subject>PUBLIC HEALTH</subject><subject>PUBLIC HEALTH CARE</subject><subject>QUALITY OF CARE</subject><subject>RADIO</subject><subject>REHABILITATION</subject><subject>RURAL AREAS</subject><subject>TUBERCULOSIS</subject><subject>VILLAGES</subject><subject>VITAMIN A</subject><subject>WEIGHT</subject><subject>WORKERS</subject><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>book</rsrctype><creationdate>2004</creationdate><recordtype>book</recordtype><sourceid>VO9</sourceid><recordid>eNqdyzEOgkAQQFEaC6PeYS5gIkEJ2q4arDRGazKwI25YdnBYJHt7Y-IJrP5r_jQ6K2xL1gZhB_feuBoUOy9Y-a89w5X0UBGcHL0G4wMYBxcxLUqAnND6JygUgj1Z8yYJ82jyQNvT4tdZtD4ebipfjixWl-iagjtyjePRkq5JqOPeeJZQxKttlhZxkmab5M_tA95BRrc</recordid><startdate>200410</startdate><enddate>200410</enddate><creator>Schwartz, J. Brad</creator><creator>Bhushan, Indu</creator><general>World Bank, Washington, DC</general><scope>VO9</scope></search><sort><creationdate>200410</creationdate><title>Cambodia : Using Contracting to Reduce Inequity in Primary Health Care Delivery</title><author>Schwartz, J. Brad ; Bhushan, Indu</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-worldbank_openknowledgerepository_10986_136853</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>books</rsrctype><prefilter>books</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2004</creationdate><topic>AGED</topic><topic>ANTENATAL CARE</topic><topic>BIRTH SPACING</topic><topic>BLOOD PRESSURE</topic><topic>CHILD IMMUNIZATION</topic><topic>CURATIVE HEALTH CARE</topic><topic>DIARRHEA</topic><topic>DISTRICTS</topic><topic>ESSENTIAL DRUGS</topic><topic>EXPENDITURES</topic><topic>GENDER</topic><topic>HEALTH CARE COVERAGE</topic><topic>HEALTH CARE DELIVERY</topic><topic>HEALTH CARE FACILITIES</topic><topic>HEALTH CARE INDICATORS</topic><topic>HEALTH CARE INFRASTRUCTURE</topic><topic>HEALTH CARE SERVICE INDICATORS</topic><topic>HEALTH CENTERS</topic><topic>HEALTH DELIVERY</topic><topic>HEALTH FACILITIES</topic><topic>HEALTH SERVICES</topic><topic>HOSPITALS</topic><topic>HOUSEHOLDS</topic><topic>HUMAN DEVELOPMENT</topic><topic>IMMUNIZATION</topic><topic>INCOME</topic><topic>INTERVENTION</topic><topic>MANAGERS</topic><topic>MATERNAL HEALTH</topic><topic>MEDICAL CARE</topic><topic>MEDICAL SUPPLIES</topic><topic>NUTRITION</topic><topic>PRIMARY HEALTH CARE</topic><topic>PRIMARY HEALTH CARE SERVICES</topic><topic>PRIVATE SECTOR</topic><topic>PROBABILITY</topic><topic>PUBLIC HEALTH</topic><topic>PUBLIC HEALTH CARE</topic><topic>QUALITY OF CARE</topic><topic>RADIO</topic><topic>REHABILITATION</topic><topic>RURAL AREAS</topic><topic>TUBERCULOSIS</topic><topic>VILLAGES</topic><topic>VITAMIN A</topic><topic>WEIGHT</topic><topic>WORKERS</topic><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Schwartz, J. Brad</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Bhushan, Indu</creatorcontrib><collection>Open Knowledge Repository</collection></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext_linktorsrc</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Schwartz, J. Brad</au><au>Bhushan, Indu</au><format>book</format><genre>book</genre><ristype>BOOK</ristype><btitle>Cambodia : Using Contracting to Reduce Inequity in Primary Health Care Delivery</btitle><seriestitle>HNP discussion paper</seriestitle><date>2004-10</date><risdate>2004</risdate><abstract>This study examines the equity impact of
using private sector contracts for the delivery of primary
health care as an alternative to traditional government
provision in Cambodia. It does so by using pre- and post
intervention data from a large scale contracting experiment
to provide primary health care in rural districts of
Cambodia between 1998 and 2001. Equity as well as coverage
targets for primary health care services were explicitly
included in contracts awarded in five of nine rural
districts with a population totaling over 1.25 million
people. The remaining four districts included in the test
were given identical equity and coverage targets and used
the traditional government provision of services. After
two-and-a-half years of the trial, the results suggest that
although coverage of primary health care services in all
districts had substantial increases, people in the poorest
one-half of households living in contracted districts were
more likely to receive these services than similarly
circumstanced poor people in government districts, other
factors equal.</abstract><pub>World Bank, Washington, DC</pub><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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language | eng |
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source | Open Knowledge Repository |
subjects | AGED ANTENATAL CARE BIRTH SPACING BLOOD PRESSURE CHILD IMMUNIZATION CURATIVE HEALTH CARE DIARRHEA DISTRICTS ESSENTIAL DRUGS EXPENDITURES GENDER HEALTH CARE COVERAGE HEALTH CARE DELIVERY HEALTH CARE FACILITIES HEALTH CARE INDICATORS HEALTH CARE INFRASTRUCTURE HEALTH CARE SERVICE INDICATORS HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH DELIVERY HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH SERVICES HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMMUNIZATION INCOME INTERVENTION MANAGERS MATERNAL HEALTH MEDICAL CARE MEDICAL SUPPLIES NUTRITION PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIMARY HEALTH CARE SERVICES PRIVATE SECTOR PROBABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH CARE QUALITY OF CARE RADIO REHABILITATION RURAL AREAS TUBERCULOSIS VILLAGES VITAMIN A WEIGHT WORKERS |
title | Cambodia : Using Contracting to Reduce Inequity in Primary Health Care Delivery |
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