Impact of donor-driven health financing policies on perceived quality of services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A scoping review

This presentation realised by Lara Gautier & Valéry Ridde for the 9th Pan-European Conference on International Relations – Wednesday 23 – Saturday 26 September 2015, Giardini Naxos, Sicily, Italy, treats about a scoping review of the impact of donor-driven health financing policies on perceived quality of services in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Mining revenue and access to health care in Africa: could the revenue drawn from well-managed mining sectors finance exemption from payment for health?

This article published on August 12th 2015 in Development in Practice and written by Valéry Ridde, Bonnie Campbell and Andréanne Martel is about mining revenue and access to health care in Africa and adresses the question if the revenue drawn from well-managed mining sectors finance exemption from payment for health.   (more…)

Books and book chapters

Accès aux soins des populations vulnérables du Sahel en Afrique de l’ouest

Transfert de connaissances - Livres et chapitres de livres

Books and book chapters

Simporé, L., Ridde, V., Queuille, L., & Hema, A. (2013). Évaluation de l’efficacité du ciblage communautaire des indigents bénéficiaires de la gratuité des soins dans les districts sanitaires de Dori et de Sebba au Burkina Faso. In P. Fournier, S. Haddad, & V. Ridde (Eds.) (pp. 209–229). Paris: Harmattan. Download
Ridde, V., Queuille, L., & Kafando, Y. (2012). Capitalisations de politiques publiques d’exemption du paiement des soins en Afrique de l’Ouest. Download

Nine misconceptions about free healthcare in sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract:

As universal healthcare gains political momentum, there is a growing international consensus against charging user fees at the point of healthcare delivery. In 1994, South Africa launched the wave of new user fees abolition policies in Africa. In 2010, both the African Union and the UN Secretary General called for free healthcare at the point of service for children under five and pregnant women. However, dismantling a user fees policy that has been in place for over 30 years is no easy task. Not only does expanding free healthcare policies routinely lead to controversy that generally arises when public policies are badly planned, underfunded, and poorly implemented, but certain groups of actors also perceive this move as a threat. However, in most cases, the continued reluctance to make healthcare free in Africa is based not on strong evidence, but rather on misconceptions around the very notion of free care. In this paper, we address nine such misconceptions about free healthcare and provide recent evidence from Africa showing the benefit of eliminating user fees for patients. Our aim is to demonstrate that when free care is properly financed and implemented, which in itself is a major challenge, certain perceptions about the principle of free healthcare turn out to be misconceptions.

View full article:

Valéry Ridde, Ludovic Queuille, Marame Ndour. (2014). Nine misconceptions about free healthcare in sub-Saharan Africa. Development Studies Research: An Open Access Journal, Volume 1(Issue 1), pages 54-63. https://doi.org/10.1080/21665095.2014.925785 Download