| Type | Journal Article - BioSocieties |
| Title | Assumptions of global beneficence: Health-care disparity, the WHO and the outcomes of integrative health-care policy at local levels in the Philippines |
| Author(s) | |
| Issue | 6 |
| Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
| Page numbers | 88-105 |
| URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Paul_Kadetz2/publication/259654431_Paul_Kadetz_Writing_Sample_1_Biosocieties/links/0c96052d273fcba3e6000000.pdf |
| Abstract | Traditional, complementary and alternative medicine (or heterodox health care) functions as the primary source of health care for a majority of populations in low-income countries. The World Health Organization has promoted the integration of heterodox healthcare practices and practitioners into formal state and local biomedical health-care systems. Heretofore, the literature has assumed the beneficence of this policy in reducing health-care disparity, without assessing the outcomes of this policy’s implementation. This research examines the impact of health-care integration policy on local health care in communities in four municipalities in the Philippines. Communities in two municipalities that implemented health-care integration (top-down and bottom-up) were compared with two municipalities that did not implement health-care integration. A qualitative design of data collection was utilised. Convenience samples (n ¼ 500) of community members, community leaders, health-care providers and key policy actors participated in semi-structured interviews and focus groups to assess the changes in community health-care systems and in community health-care access following healthcare integration. The assumptions of beneficence of health-care integration are not supported by this research. Furthermore, this research suggests that health-care integration may not be beneficial to communities if implemented in a manner that ignores the particular needs of a given local context. |
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