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      Transaction costs of access to health care: Implications of the care-seeking pathways of tuberculosis patients for health system governance in Nigeria

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          Abstract

          Health care costs incurred prior to the appropriate patient–provider transaction (i.e., transaction costs of access to health care) are potential barriers to accessing health care in low- and middle-income countries. This paper explores these transaction costs and their implications for health system governance through a cross-sectional survey of adult patients who received their first diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) at the three designated secondary health centres for TB care in Ebonyi State, Nigeria. The patients provided information on their care-seeking pathways and the associated costs prior to reaching the appropriate provider. Of the 452 patients, 84% first consulted an inappropriate provider. Only 33% of inappropriate consultations were with qualified providers (QP); the rest were with informal providers such as pharmacy providers (PPs; 57%) and traditional providers (TP; 10%). Notably, 62% of total transaction costs were incurred during the first visit to an inappropriate provider and the mean transaction costs incurred was highest with QPs (US$30.20) compared with PPs (US$14.40) and TPs (US$15.70). These suggest that interventions for reducing transaction costs should include effective decentralisation to integrate TB care with services at the primary health care level, community engagement to address information asymmetry, enforcing regulations to keep informal providers within legal limits and facilitating referral linkages among formal and informal providers to increase early contact with appropriate providers.

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          What Is the Role of Informal Healthcare Providers in Developing Countries? A Systematic Review

          Informal health care providers (IPs) comprise a significant component of health systems in developing nations. Yet little is known about the most basic characteristics of performance, cost, quality, utilization, and size of this sector. To address this gap we conducted a comprehensive literature review on the informal health care sector in developing countries. We searched for studies published since 2000 through electronic databases PubMed, Google Scholar, and relevant grey literature from The New York Academy of Medicine, The World Bank, The Center for Global Development, USAID, SHOPS (formerly PSP-One), The World Health Organization, DFID, Human Resources for Health Global Resource Center. In total, 334 articles were retrieved, and 122 met inclusion criteria and chosen for data abstraction. Results indicate that IPs make up a significant portion of the healthcare sector globally, with almost half of studies (48%) from Sub-Saharan Africa. Utilization estimates from 24 studies in the literature of IP for healthcare services ranged from 9% to 90% of all healthcare interactions, depending on the country, the disease in question, and methods of measurement. IPs operate in a variety of health areas, although baseline information on quality is notably incomplete and poor quality of care is generally assumed. There was a wide variation in how quality of care is measured. The review found that IPs reported inadequate drug provision, poor adherence to clinical national guidelines, and that there were gaps in knowledge and provider practice; however, studies also found that the formal sector also reported poor provider practices. Reasons for using IPs included convenience, affordability, and social and cultural effects. Recommendations from the literature amount to a call for more engagement with the IP sector. IPs are a large component of nearly all developing country health systems. Research and policies of engagement are needed.
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            The Contested Role of Heterogeneity in Collective Action: Some Evidence from Community Forestry in Nepal

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              Towards people-centred health systems: a multi-level framework for analysing primary health care governance in low- and middle-income countries

              Although there is evidence that non-government health system actors can individually or collectively develop practical strategies to address primary health care (PHC) challenges in the community, existing frameworks for analysing health system governance largely focus on the role of governments, and do not sufficiently account for the broad range of contribution to PHC governance. This is important because of the tendency for weak governments in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We present a multi-level governance framework for use as a thinking guide in analysing PHC governance in LMICs. This framework has previously been used to analyse the governance of common-pool resources such as community fisheries and irrigation systems. We apply the framework to PHC because, like common-pool resources, PHC facilities in LMICs tend to be commonly owned by the community such that individual and collective action is often required to avoid the ‘tragedy of the commons’—destruction and degradation of the resource resulting from lack of concern for its continuous supply. In the multi-level framework, PHC governance is conceptualized at three levels, depending on who influences the supply and demand of PHC services in a community and how: operational governance (individuals and providers within the local health market), collective governance (community coalitions) and constitutional governance (governments at different levels and other distant but influential actors). Using the example of PHC governance in Nigeria, we illustrate how the multi-level governance framework offers a people-centred lens on the governance of PHC in LMICs, with a focus on relations among health system actors within and between levels of governance. We demonstrate the potential impact of health system actors functioning at different levels of governance on PHC delivery, and how governance failure at one level can be assuaged by governance at another level.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Glob Public Health
                Glob Public Health
                RGPH
                rgph20
                Global Public Health
                Routledge
                1744-1692
                1744-1706
                21 October 2015
                5 February 2015
                : 10
                : 9
                : 1060-1077
                Affiliations
                [ a ]School of Public Health, University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW, Australia
                [ b ]National Primary Health Care Development Agency , Abuja, Nigeria
                [ c ]The George Institute for Global Health , Sydney, NSW, Australia
                [ d ]Department of Medicine, Federal Teaching Hospital , Abakaliki, Nigeria
                [ e ]College of Medicine, University of Nigeria , Enugu Campus, Nsukka, Nigeria
                [ f ]Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON, Canada
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. Email: seyeabimbola@ 123456hotmail.com
                Article
                1007470
                10.1080/17441692.2015.1007470
                4696418
                25652349
                8eb266e0-df1a-4a56-bd31-8ff46fb338fd
                © 2015 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License ( http://creativecommons.org/Licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way.

                History
                : 31 May 2014
                : 17 October 2014
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 4, References: 42, Pages: 18
                Funding
                Funded by: Rotary Foundation 10.13039/100004460
                Award ID: GG1412096
                Funded by: University of Sydney 10.13039/501100001774
                Award ID: International Scholarship
                During the completion of this work, Seye Abimbola was supported by the Rotary Foundation through a Global Grant Scholarship [grant number GG1412096] and by the Sydney Medical School Foundation through a University of Sydney International Scholarship. The primary data collection for this study was supported in part by a grant to Kingsley Ukwaja from the Pan African Thoracic Society's Methods in Epidemiologic, Clinical and Operations Research Programme. No additional external funding was received for this study. The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of this manuscript.
                Categories
                Original Articles

                Public health
                transaction costs,information asymmetry,informal providers,governance,nigeria
                Public health
                transaction costs, information asymmetry, informal providers, governance, nigeria

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