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Building institutions for an effective health system: lessons from China's experience with rural health reform

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posted on 2024-09-05, 23:43 authored by Gerry Bloom
This paper is concerned with the management of health system changes aimed at substantially increasing the access to safe and effective health services. It argues that an effective health sector relies on trust-based relationships between users, providers and funders of health services, and that one of the major challenges governments face is to construct institutional arrangements within which these relationships can be embedded. It presents the case of China, which is implementing an ambitious health reform, drawing on a series of visits to rural counties by the author over a 10-year period. It illustrates how the development of reform strategies has been a response both to the challenges arising from the transition to a market economy and the result of actions by different actors, which have led to the gradual creation of increasingly complex institutions. The overall direction of change has been strongly influenced by the efforts made by the political leadership to manage a transition to a modern economy which provides at least some basic benefits to all. The paper concludes that the key lessons for other countries from China’s experience with health system reform are less about the detailed design of specific interventions than about its approach to the management of institution-building in a context of complexity and rapid change.

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ESRC

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Publisher

Elsevier

Citation

Bloom, Gerald. "Building institutions for an effective health system: Lessons from China’s experience with rural health reform." Social Science & Medicine 72.8 (2011): 1302-1309.

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Article

Copyright holder

Elsevier

Country

China

Language

en

Identifier ISSN

0277-9536

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