NGOs, austerity, and universal health coverage in Mozambique

被引:0
作者
James Pfeiffer
Rachel R. Chapman
机构
[1] University of Washington,Department of Global Health, Department of Anthropology
[2] University of Washington,Department of Anthropology
来源
Globalization and Health | / 15卷
关键词
Mozambique; IMF; NGOs; HIV/AIDS; Universal health coverage;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In many African countries, hundreds of health-related NGOs are fed by a chaotic tangle of donor funding streams. The case of Mozambique illustrates how this NGO model impedes Universal Health Coverage. In the 1990s, NGOs multiplied across post-war Mozambique: the country’s structural adjustment program constrained public and foreign aid expenditures on the public health system, while donors favored private contractors and NGOs. In the 2000s, funding for HIV/AIDS and other vertical aid from many donors increased dramatically. In 2004, the United States introduced PEPFAR in Mozambique at nearly 500 million USD per year, roughly equivalent to the entire budget of the Ministry of Health. To be sure, PEPFAR funding has helped thousands access antiretroviral treatment, but over 90% of resources flow “off-budget” to NGO “implementing partners,” with little left for the public health system. After a decade of this major donor funding to NGOs, public sector health system coverage had barely changed. In 2014, the workforce/ population ratio was still among the five worst in the world at 71/10000; the health facility/per capita ratio worsened since 2009 to only 1 per 16,795. Achieving UHC will require rejection of austerity constraints on public sector health systems, and rechanneling of aid to public systems building rather than to NGOs.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]  
Kentikelenis AE(2017)Structural adjustment and health: a conceptual framework and evidence on pathways Soc Sci Med 187 296-305
[2]  
Kentikelenis AE(2015)Structural adjustment and public spending on health: Evidence from IMF programs in low-income countries Soc Sci Med 126 169-176
[3]  
Stubbs TH(2009)The International Monetary Fund's effects on global health: before and after the 2008 financial crisis Int J Health Serv 39 771-781
[4]  
King LP(2002)The missionary position: NGOs and development in Africa Int Aff 78 567-584
[5]  
Stuckler D(2018)Alma-Ata at 40 years: reflections from the lancet commission on investing in health Lancet 392 1434-1460
[6]  
Basu S(1980)Selective primary health care: an interim strategy for disease control in developing countries Soc Sci Med C 14 145-163
[7]  
Manji F(1988)Health as a target: South Africa's destabilization of Mozambique Soc Sci Med 27 717-722
[8]  
O'Coill C(1993)Donor-dependence or donor control?: the case of Mozambique Community Dev J 28 237-244
[9]  
Watkins DA(2017)Austerity and the “sector-wide approach” to health: the Mozambique experience Soc Sci Med 187 208-216
[10]  
Yamey G(2009)Has aid for AIDS raised all health funding boats? JAIDS J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 52 S45-S48