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Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector

The purpose of the current study was to assess how RBF performed in terms of efficiency, effectiveness, equity and governance in the Zimbabwean context. It outlines the evolution of health systems thinking and health funding models over time to show the history and changing landscape of health care...

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Main Author: Mutopo, Yvonne
Other Authors: Kabinga, Mundia
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Research of GSB 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mutopo, Yvonne
author2 Kabinga, Mundia
author_browse Kabinga, Mundia
Mutopo, Yvonne
author_facet Kabinga, Mundia
Mutopo, Yvonne
author_sort Mutopo, Yvonne
collection Thesis
description The purpose of the current study was to assess how RBF performed in terms of efficiency, effectiveness, equity and governance in the Zimbabwean context. It outlines the evolution of health systems thinking and health funding models over time to show the history and changing landscape of health care financing and their actors. General consensus is there is need to focus on results of health care investments against a background of prodigious amounts of foreign aid with marginal or no improvements in heath care delivery for decades of development assistance in developing countries. Health systems in developing countries are beset with burgeoning domestic and foreign debts as well as diminishing fiscal space that has more often put the primary health delivery system in developing nations in "comatose". The research made use of both qualitative and quantitative dimensions. Findings indicate that the pre-RBF era was characterised by poor primary health outcomes, unsound governance and a lack of confidence in the public health delivery system. However, since RBF implementation, access to health care by marginalised groups has increased, with incentives and community participation liberalising health systems to greater efficiency as shown by slight increases in post-natal care visits in rural health care centres. A trade-off between achieving efficiency and equity was found especially when scaling up health programmes under the RBF initiative. Through embracing RBF, the primary health delivery system is poised for future development attributed to community buy-in and people-centric empowerment approaches.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Research of GSB
publisherStr Research of GSB
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/27236 Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector Mutopo, Yvonne Kabinga, Mundia Development Finance Health Economics The purpose of the current study was to assess how RBF performed in terms of efficiency, effectiveness, equity and governance in the Zimbabwean context. It outlines the evolution of health systems thinking and health funding models over time to show the history and changing landscape of health care financing and their actors. General consensus is there is need to focus on results of health care investments against a background of prodigious amounts of foreign aid with marginal or no improvements in heath care delivery for decades of development assistance in developing countries. Health systems in developing countries are beset with burgeoning domestic and foreign debts as well as diminishing fiscal space that has more often put the primary health delivery system in developing nations in "comatose". The research made use of both qualitative and quantitative dimensions. Findings indicate that the pre-RBF era was characterised by poor primary health outcomes, unsound governance and a lack of confidence in the public health delivery system. However, since RBF implementation, access to health care by marginalised groups has increased, with incentives and community participation liberalising health systems to greater efficiency as shown by slight increases in post-natal care visits in rural health care centres. A trade-off between achieving efficiency and equity was found especially when scaling up health programmes under the RBF initiative. Through embracing RBF, the primary health delivery system is poised for future development attributed to community buy-in and people-centric empowerment approaches. 2018-02-02T09:26:57Z 2018-02-02T09:26:57Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27236 eng application/pdf Research of GSB Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Development Finance
Health Economics
Mutopo, Yvonne
Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector
title_full Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector
title_fullStr Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector
title_short Rethinking health care financing models: the case of Zimbabwe's health sector
title_sort rethinking health care financing models the case of zimbabwe s health sector
topic Development Finance
Health Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27236
work_keys_str_mv AT mutopoyvonne rethinkinghealthcarefinancingmodelsthecaseofzimbabweshealthsector