20 resultados para Africa, Southern
Resumo:
University of Pretoria / Dissertation / Department of Church History and Church Policy / Advised by Prof J W Hofmeyr
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/anenglishwomanst00hawkuoft
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/insouthernindivi00mitcuoft
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/martyrsofgolbant00brewiala
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/equatorssnowype00crawuoft
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/thingsastheyarem00wilsuoft
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/garenganze00arnouoft/
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/johnludwigkrapfe00kretiala
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/daybreakinliving011984mbp
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/southsouthcentra00daviiala/
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/amemoirofedwards00heanuoft
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/christianadventu00tayluoft
Resumo:
Paper published in PLoS Medicine in 2007.
Resumo:
Background: Rationing of access to antiretroviral therapy already exists in sub-Saharan Africa and will intensify as national treatment programs develop. The number of people who are medically eligible for therapy will far exceed the human, infrastructural, and financial resources available, making rationing of public treatment services inevitable. Methods: We identified 15 criteria by which antiretroviral therapy could be rationed in African countries and analyzed the resulting rationing systems across 5 domains: clinical effectiveness, implementation feasibility, cost, economic efficiency, and social equity. Findings: Rationing can be explicit or implicit. Access to treatment can be explicitly targeted to priority subpopulations such as mothers of newborns, skilled workers, students, or poor people. Explicit conditions can also be set that cause differential access, such as residence in a designated geographic area, co-payment, access to testing, or a demonstrated commitment to adhere to therapy. Implicit rationing on the basis of first-come, first-served or queuing will arise when no explicit system is enforced; implicit systems almost always allow a high degree of queue-jumping by the elite. There is a direct tradeoff between economic efficiency and social equity. Interpretation: Rationing is inevitable in most countries for some period of time. Without deliberate social policy decisions, implicit rationing systems that are neither efficient nor equitable will prevail. Governments that make deliberate choices, and then explain and defend those choices to their constituencies, are more likely to achieve a socially desirable outcome from the large investments now being made than are those that allow queuing and queue-jumping to dominate.