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The Privatization Imperative: Women Negotiating Healthcare in Kandy, Sri Lank

Posted on:2019-02-26Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Kumar, RamyaFull Text:PDF
GTID:1474390017488964Subject:Public Health
Abstract/Summary:
Since the 1980s, poorer countries have shifted health reform efforts from strengthening public systems to increasing the private sector's role in healthcare provision. Empirical research on healthcare access focuses on quantifying out-of-pocket payments or service utilization, making invisible both user experiences and how the dynamics of public and private provision are contingent on place and social relations. Historically a model for poorer countries, Sri Lanka's public healthcare system is seeing steady privatization following decades of insufficient state investment alongside incentivized private expansion. However, little is known about what this restructuring means for healthcare access in Sri Lanka.;I employed a Third World Marxist feminist qualitative methodology to explore how the presence of private healthcare shapes access for women in Kandy, Sri Lanka. I asked: Where do women go for healthcare? What are their impressions of the health services they use? How do they navigate public and private systems? And how are these questions shaped by social location? Using focus groups, interviews, meetings, and a short survey, I gathered data from 40 residents of Udawatta Division. My analysis linked macrostructures and processes of healthcare restructuring with women's everyday experiences of utilizing healthcare.;Economic exclusion and quality concerns limited the range of private healthcare 'choices' available to users. Almost all women mixed public and private services, with these hybrid arrangements differing by social location. Economically disadvantaged users were compelled to consume private healthcare owing to service deficits in the public system. Middle-class women mostly used private outpatient services, and exploited 'dual practice' to access more responsive public inpatient care. Socially disadvantaged women, particularly ethnic minorities, relied on the same pathway to avoid neglect and/or abuse within the public system.;The state's 'withdrawal' from healthcare provision, and its incentives for private expansion, has wide-ranging implications for users in Kandy. As women struggle to address service gaps in the public sector, hybrid arrangements stratify services along class and ethnic lines, creating opportunities for private accumulation. My findings interrogate the direction of Sri Lanka's health reform and call into question global health advocacy for 'mixed health systems' as a path to achieving 'Universal Health Coverage.'...
Keywords/Search Tags:Health, Private, Women, Public, Sri, System, Kandy
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