Global Health minders
Systems do not have brains: the hidden long
term costs of user fees
The world’s
premier global health journal, The Lancet, recently released a special
collection of papers exploring the social, political, and economic issues
around the global movement towards universal health coverage. Thirty years
after he advocated user fees for healthcare in developing countries, former
World Bank thinker David de Ferranti, lead author of the Lancet series urging
universal healthcare, explains his change of mind a few weeks ago at the UN
General Assembly, the Lancet, with the Rockefeller Foundation and Results for
Development, officially launched its series on universal health coverage – an
idea whose time appears to have come, or perhaps returned. There were some
raised eyebrows, however, over the name of the man who led the Lancet series.
It was David de Ferranti, now president of the Results for Development
Institute but in the 1980s, a staff member of the World Bank and one of the
chief proponents of the introduction of user fees.
User fees
for health care not only decrease utilization of health services, but also
results in delayed presentation for care, incomplete or inadequate care,
compromised food security and household financial security, and reduced agency
for women in health care decision making. The effects of user fees are
amplified by conditions of poverty, as well as gender and health inequality;
user fees in turn reinforced the inequalities created by those very conditions.
There are multi-faceted health and socioeconomic effects of user fees, and may
impact quality of care, health outcomes, food insecurity, and gender
inequality, in addition to impacting health care utilization and household
finances. Even though user fees may now be abolished in many developing
countries the concept has entered the weak health care systems as a virus and
all over Africa and Asia poor patients are now instead faced with unofficial
user fees for HIV lab tests and drugs, tuberculosis treatment. Poor pregnant
women are asked to pay unofficial fees if they want an assisted delivery, and
even more if they want medications, a bed, a cesarean section or a kit for
cleaning the umbilical cord. And user fees are a poverty booster: the poorer a
TB patient is the more they are likely to be presented with an unofficial
illegal user fee for their treatment. User fees may well turn out to be the
biggest single risk factor for child mortality in Sub Saharan Africa – but no
one dares to do this unpleasant calculation.
The same international
institutions that in the 80ies without any scientific evidence introduced user
fees to the defenseless fragile health care systems in Africa now advocates its
abolishment 30 years after the introduction. The problem is that just as they
didn’t do their homework when they introduced the concept in the 80ies they are
promoting the idea of Universal Health Coverage without any idea of the long
term hidden consequences of user fees and how this will tamper with their
latest fashion in health. Systems do not have brains. That is why we need The
Global Health Minders: a think network that can act as a surrogate
brain for the international global health community by suggesting and
supporting a more sustainable way for global health based on experience,
evidence and a broader more long term view on health effects of proposed
interventions.
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