Int J Health Serv. 2011;41(2):355-70. doi: 10.2190/HS.41.2.i.
In 1993, the Colombian government sought to reform its health care system under the guidance of international financial institutions (the World Bank and International Monetary Fund). These institutions maintain that individual private health insurance systems are more appropriate than previously established national public health structures for overcoming inequities in health care in developing countries. The reforms carried out following international financial institution guidelines are known as "neoliberal reforms." This qualitative study explores consumer health choices and associated factors, based on interviews with citizens living in Medellin, Colombia, in 2005-2006. The results show that most study participants belonging to low-income and middle-income strata, even with medical expense subsidies, faced significant barriers to accessing health care. Only upper-income participants reported a selection of different options without barriers, such as complementary and alternative medicines, along with private Western biomedicine. This study is unique in that the informal health system is linked to overall neo-liberal policy change.
1993 年,在国际金融机构(世界银行和国际货币基金组织)的指导下,哥伦比亚政府试图改革其医疗保健系统。这些机构认为,与以前建立的国家公共卫生结构相比,个人私营医疗保险系统更适合克服发展中国家医疗保健方面的不平等。根据国际金融机构指导方针进行的改革被称为“新自由主义改革”。本定性研究探讨了消费者的健康选择及其相关因素,其基础是对 2005-2006 年居住在哥伦比亚麦德林的公民进行的访谈。结果表明,大多数属于低收入和中等收入阶层的研究参与者,即使有医疗费用补贴,在获得医疗保健方面也面临着重大障碍。只有高收入参与者报告说,他们可以选择不同的没有障碍的方案,如补充和替代药物,以及私立西方生物医学。这项研究的独特之处在于,非正式卫生系统与总体新自由主义政策变化有关。