Archive for September, 2010

African Health Revolution: an inevitable movement towards people power

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

With the growing difficulties in providing health care to everyone, governments sought solutions. Among those solutions were: privatization, decentralization, and integration of traditional health workers. It has become ever more apparent that government planning and policies are inadequate. It is time to put the power back in the hands of the people. The authors, Sama and Nguyen, remind us that,

Years ago, organised health systems in the modern sense barely existed. Few people alive then would ever visit a hospital. Most were born into large families and faced an infancy and childhood threatened by a host of potentially fatal diseases – measles, smallpox, malaria and poliomyelitis among them. Infant and child mortality was very high as were maternal mortality rates. Life expectancy was short.[1]

The financing of health systems has changed only slightly over the years. The modern, Western approach is still pursued even when this is not the most effective approach for African health needs. Turshen notes that,

Economists at international financial institutions have taken a radical, free-market approach to financing health care. They say that even strong economies can no longer afford to pay for public services and that weak economies in the third world [developing] must strip their large bureaucracies if they are to remain eligible for loans and foreign investment.[2]

This “radical, free-market” approach has led many African countries to rely on private health services for their citizens. This is an effective way for health care to be provided to citizens, but it further marginalizes those who cannot pay. Unfortunately, “universal health care” schemes are also ineffective in reaching everyone in need because government financing quickly runs out as both the wealthy and poor access health care for free.

Decentralization of health care is by far an approach that has incredible potential for effective health care systems. Joseph Stiglitz wrote in a World Bank report,

In many cases innovative approaches to service delivery will involve greater participation by local communities and decentralization of decisionmaking.[3]

The model that many top (and top-down) economists should use is best known as “autonomous development.” Development that is defined and controlled by local people is autonomous. This type of development is exemplified by indigenous groups in the Andes, where they define development as “wellbeing not only of the individual, but also of the world around them (Saravia qtd. in Ruonavaara). Related to this, Esteva writes that people sought to liberate themselves from their economic chains and so created new commons in their neighborhoods, barrios, and villages (20). This decentralized approach is often referred to as a hub-and-spoke model within health care. Halvorson writes on the needs and benefits of this model,

Physician-centric, fee-based, Western-style medical-care systems will clearly not work in most of rural Africa […]. They are too expensive, too unfocused, too haphazard, and there are just not enough doctors. We need to abandon attempts to recreate this business model in the third world and replace it with a team-care model that uses a hub-and-spoke approach to maximize available resources, create new resources where needed, reduce costs, and multiply the quality and quantity of local care delivery. We need people who can provide the basic care villages need—and we need those people to be part of an integrated system. This new model of care would require new categories of basic health care workers who are linked with higher levels of caregivers in more central locations. The frontline caregivers should be the functional equivalent of well-trained military medics—able to diagnose and prescribe drugs for a few common diseases, get advice, and perform first aid, including basic cut suturing, leg setting, and wound repair.[4]

The Western health care model is one about money and not effective care. Replicating this will only perpetuate, or make worse, health issues across Africa. African communities need a model that has low capital need, easy integration of para-professionals, and is more decentralized within areas of coverage.

The coming revolution in African health care is one where systems will be structured more and more with community integration and participation. Carino and her colleagues researched five mechanisms for effective rural health care delivery. The combination of greater integration in a rural community and participation of community members created the most effective health care outcomes.[5] This fact is also confirmed by social movement strategist Tarrow,

The most effective forms of organization are based on partly autonomous and contextually rooted local units linked by connective structures, and coordinated by formal organizations.[6]

With a hub-and-spoke health care system model focused on decentralized para-professional health workers on the frontlines of health care delivery utilizing new technologies to remain in communication with the broader health care system, access to health care and meeting the basic needs of African populations can become a reality. The coming revolution in African health care will depend on four main components that allow people the power to be involved in their own health care: (1) cooperative financing, (2) increased opportunity to training community health workers (para-professionals), (3) capacity of information technology to share knowledge, and (4) improved accessibility to preventative health care measures. The revolution has come!


[1] Sama, Martyn and Vinh-Kim Nguyen. Governing Health Systems in Africa. Council of Development of Social Science Research in Africa, 2008. (1)

[2] Turshen, 1.

[3] Stiglitz, Joseph. Assessing Aid: What Works, What Doesn’t, and Why. World Bank: November, 1998.

[4] Halvorson, George C. Hub-and-spoke health care. What Matters. 29 February 2009. <http://whatmatters.mckinseydigital.com/health_care/hub-and-spoke-health-care>.

[5] Carino, Ledivina V. and Associates. Integration, Participation and Effectiveness: An Analysis of the Operations and Effects of Five Rural Health Delivery Mechanisms. Philippine Institute for Development Studies. 1982. (6)

[6] Tarrow, Sidney. Power in Movement. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,1998. (137)

Articulate Call for Papers (Fall 2010)

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

SCOUT BANANA, in conjunction with James Madison College and the MSU African Studies Center, invites you to submit a manuscript to

Volume III, Issue I of Articulate: Undergraduate Research Applied to Development in Africa.

Articulate is an undergraduate journal that publishes academic papers and writings on development in Africa and African issues. It is a forum for students to contribute to, as well as initiate, debates in international development, as undergraduates remain a vital, untapped force for new ideas and perspectives within the development dialogue.

Primary criteria for inclusion in the journal are quality of research, relevance, and originality. All manuscripts must have been written as an undergraduate student. For Scholarly Articulates, we ask for submissions of roughly 15-20 pages double-spaced with citations formatted according to the Chicago Manual of Style, and an abstract of 200 words. We also ask that the author’s name, major, college, and university appear on a separate cover sheet, with no reference to the author within the manuscript.

Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

  • The effectiveness of foreign aid, microfinance, and social enterprise in Africa
  • Intersections of gender, religion, ethnicity, and sexuality in African development
  • Consequences of globalization, especially financial and trade integration
  • Historical analyses and case studies of health care policies in Africa
  • Politics of water and medicine in Africa
  • The role of African youth in development programs and projects
  • Effects of conflict and migration on health care and development

Articulate is also seeking brief reflective essays on your experiences in Africa, as well as reviews on literature relevant to Africa, development, and health care.

Reflective essays are 2-3 single-spaced pages and can take a variety of creative forms. They should explore development work from the perspective of a young person (under 30) from the Global North entering the Global South. Was it how you thought it would be? What did you like and/or dislike about it? What do you wish you had known when you were just “studying,” as opposed to working, in Africa on health-related issues? Other themes may be considered with consultation from the Editor-in-Chief.

Literature reviews are 2-3 single-spaced pages and are meant to keep Articulate’s readers abreast of current works and on-going debates pertinent to development, Africa, and health care. Reviews must provide a careful, thoughtful analysis and critique of a work’s main themes, objectives, arguments, and conclusions. They should include at least three titled sub-sections: an introduction that includes a synopsis of the work; an analysis that considers what, if any, assumptions underlie the author’s thinking and, if evidence is cited, how well it supports the work’s main objective; and a conclusion that summates your analysis and states the overall merits and/or shortcomings of the work.

Manuscripts will be accepted until Wednesday, September 15, 2010, with publication intended during November 2010. For submissions or inquiries, please contact the Editor-in-Chief at articulate@scoutbanana.org.

For more information, check out http://scoutbanana.org/articulate.


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