Hill Peter S, Pavignani Enrico, Michael Markus, Murru Maurizio, Beesley Mark E
School of Population Health, The University of Queensland, Herston Road, Herston 4006, Brisbane, Australia.
School of Population Health, The University of Queensland, Rua Aquino de Bragança 140, Bairro COOP, Maputo, Mozambique.
Confl Health. 2014 Oct 22;8:20. doi: 10.1186/1752-1505-8-20. eCollection 2014.
Definitions of fragile states focus on state willingness and capacity to ensure security and provide essential services, including health. Conventional analyses and subsequent policies that focus on state-delivered essential services miss many developments in severely disrupted healthcare arenas. The research seeks to gain insights about the large sections of the health field left to evolve spontaneously by the absent or diminished state.
THE STUDY EXAMINED SIX DIVERSE CASE STUDIES: Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haïti, Palestine, and Somalia. A comprehensive documentary analysis was complemented by site visits in 2011-2012 and interviews with key informants.
Despite differing histories, countries shared chronic disruption of health services, with limited state service provision, and low community expectations of quality of care. The space left by compromised or absent state-provided services is filled by multiple diverse actors. Health is commoditized, health services are heterogeneous and irregular, with public goods such as immunization and preventive services lagging behind curative ones. Health workers with disparate skills, and atypical health facilities proliferate. Health care absorbs large private expenditures, sustained by households, remittances, charitable and solidarity funding, and constitutes a substantial portion of the country economy. Pharmaceutical markets thrive. Trans-border healthcare provision is prominent in most studied settings, conferring regional and sometimes true globalized characteristics to these arenas.
We identify three distortions in the way the global development community has considered health service provision. The first distortion is the assumption that beyond the reach of state- and donor-sponsored services is a "void", waiting to be filled. Our analysis suggests that the opposite is the case. The second distortion relates to the inadequacy of the usual binary categories structuring conventional health system analyses, when applied to these contexts. The third distortion reflects the failure of the global development community to recognise-or engage-the emergent networks of health providers. To effectively harness the service provision currently available in this crowded space, development actors need to adapt their current approaches, engage non-state providers, and support local capacity and governance, particularly grassroots social institutions with a public-good orientation.
脆弱国家的定义侧重于国家确保安全和提供包括卫生在内的基本服务的意愿和能力。专注于国家提供基本服务的传统分析及后续政策忽略了严重混乱的医疗领域中的许多发展情况。该研究旨在深入了解因国家缺失或能力减弱而自发演变的大部分卫生领域情况。
该研究考察了六个不同的案例:阿富汗、中非共和国、刚果民主共和国、海地、巴勒斯坦和索马里。2011 - 2012年的实地考察以及与关键信息提供者的访谈对全面的文献分析起到了补充作用。
尽管历史各异,但这些国家都存在卫生服务长期中断的情况,国家提供的服务有限,社区对医疗质量的期望也很低。国家提供的服务受损或缺失所留下的空间由多个不同行为体填补。卫生被商品化,卫生服务种类繁多且不规范,免疫和预防服务等公共产品落后于治疗服务。拥有不同技能的卫生工作者以及非典型卫生设施大量涌现。医疗保健消耗大量私人支出,由家庭、汇款、慈善和团结资金维持,并且在国家经济中占很大一部分。药品市场繁荣。在大多数研究的环境中,跨境医疗服务很突出,使这些领域具有区域乃至有时是真正的全球化特征。
我们确定了全球发展界在考虑卫生服务提供方式上存在的三种扭曲情况。第一种扭曲是假定在国家和捐助者资助的服务范围之外是一个有待填补的“空白”。我们的分析表明情况恰恰相反。第二种扭曲涉及将传统卫生系统分析中常用的二元分类法应用于这些情况时的不充分性。第三种扭曲反映出全球发展界未能认识到或参与新兴的卫生服务提供者网络。为了有效利用当前在这个拥挤空间中现有的服务提供,发展行为体需要调整其当前方法,与非国家提供者合作,并支持地方能力和治理,特别是具有公益导向的基层社会机构。