Bamako Initiative
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bamako_Initiative
L'initiative de Bamako correspond à une réforme de la gestion des systèmes de santé. Adoptée à la suite d'une réunion de ministres de la santé africains à Bamako au Mali, elle est mise en œuvre dans plusieurs pays en voie de développement, confrontés à des situations économiques difficiles, à partir de la fin des années 1980.
rdf:langString
The Bamako Initiative was a formal statement adopted by African health ministers in 1987 in Bamako, Mali, to implement strategies designed to increase the availability of essential drugs and other healthcare services for Sub-Saharan Africans. The idea as proposed by UNICEF's executive director, James P. Grant, was for UNICEF and other donors to supply drugs to countries which would be sold a little above cost. The profits from these sales would be used to buy more drugs in a self-sustaining way. By 1988, 20 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa were making plans.
rdf:langString
Die Bamako-Initiative war eine, 1987 in der Hauptstadt Bamako des westafrikanischen Landes Mali stattfindende, WHO-Konferenz, die die Gesundheitspolitik Afrikas südlich der Sahara nachhaltig veränderte. Die Bamako-Initiative wurde in der Folge vereinzelt auch in Ländern Asiens und Lateinamerikas implementiert.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Bamako-Initiative
rdf:langString
Bamako Initiative
rdf:langString
Initiative de Bamako
xsd:integer
8543287
xsd:integer
1064536330
rdf:langString
Die Bamako-Initiative war eine, 1987 in der Hauptstadt Bamako des westafrikanischen Landes Mali stattfindende, WHO-Konferenz, die die Gesundheitspolitik Afrikas südlich der Sahara nachhaltig veränderte. Es wurden Auswege aus der drohenden Finanzkrise öffentlicher Gesundheitseinrichtungen in Ländern Afrikas gesucht. Ergebnis war ein Programm, das auf die verstärkte Einbindung der Bevölkerung in die Errichtung und Erhaltung von Gesundheitseinrichtungen abzielt. Sie besteht aus dem Beschluss, Gesundheitseinrichtungen mittels eines Kofinanzierungsmodelles zu revitalisieren. Dieses beruht auf ökonomischer Eigenverantwortlichkeit der lokalen Bevölkerung, sei es über einfache Versicherungssysteme oder durch Tarifizierung von Behandlungen und Medikamenten. Die Bamako-Initiative wurde in der Folge vereinzelt auch in Ländern Asiens und Lateinamerikas implementiert.
rdf:langString
The Bamako Initiative was a formal statement adopted by African health ministers in 1987 in Bamako, Mali, to implement strategies designed to increase the availability of essential drugs and other healthcare services for Sub-Saharan Africans. The idea as proposed by UNICEF's executive director, James P. Grant, was for UNICEF and other donors to supply drugs to countries which would be sold a little above cost. The profits from these sales would be used to buy more drugs in a self-sustaining way. By 1988, 20 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa were making plans. A Health Policy and Planning article by Hardon (1990; 5: 186-189) describes the initiative as follows: The Bamako Initiative is a joint World Health Organization/ United Nations Children's Fund (WHO/UNICEF) Initiative aimed at solving the problems in the financing of primary health care in sub-Saharan Africa. It was launched in September 1987 at a regional WHO meeting, where Mr Grant, director of UNICEF, dealt with the severe economic crises facing sub-Saharan Africa, the negative effects of adjustment programmes on health, and the reluctance of donors to continue to fund recurrent costs of primary health care programmes. He outlined his vision of how primary health care could be revitalized by generating funds in communities through the sales of drugs at a price considerably higher than cost. Following this speech, the African ministers of health present at the meeting adopted a resolution in which they called for the acceleration of primary health care by:
* defining and implementing self-financing mechanisms at district level
* equity in providing health services
* encouraging social mobilization and
* ensuring a regular supply of drugs. Positive experience with revolving drug funds was cited as a reason for the implementation of community financing mechanisms that rely on revenue out of the sales of drugs.
rdf:langString
L'initiative de Bamako correspond à une réforme de la gestion des systèmes de santé. Adoptée à la suite d'une réunion de ministres de la santé africains à Bamako au Mali, elle est mise en œuvre dans plusieurs pays en voie de développement, confrontés à des situations économiques difficiles, à partir de la fin des années 1980.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
5134