分散和城市初级卫生服务:德里莫哈拉诊所的个案研究

IF 0.5 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance Pub Date : 2020-12-30 DOI:10.5130/cjlg.vi23.6987
Sejal Patel, Priyankita Pant
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2015年在德里市掌权的印度Aam Aadmi政党推出了Mohalla诊所(即社区诊所),为所有人提供免费的初级保健服务,以应对城市穷人越来越难以获得初级保健设施的问题。这些诊所将通过Mohalla Sabhas(即社区委员会)进行管理,这是社区内参与性管理的工具。这项研究比较了Mohalla诊所的承诺和实践,特别关注治理和围绕它的政治。作者发现,Mohalla诊所目前的形式仅限于提供初级治疗保健,取得的成功有限,尽管Mohalla诊所的用户确实节省了初级保健的时间和支出,而且诊所的初级保健形式比过去更加全面。然而,Mohalla诊所是由国家首都地区德里政府以自上而下的方式管理的,而不是由城市地方机构或设想中的社区委员会管理。因此,他们面临的问题可能会长期抑制他们的功能。
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Decentralisation and urban primary health services: a case study of Delhi’s Mohalla Clinics
The Indian political party Aam Aadmi, which assumed power in the city-state of Delhi in 2015, introduced Mohalla Clinics (i.e. neighbourhood clinics) to provide free primary health services for all, as a response to the rising inaccessibility of primary healthcare facilities for the urban poor. These clinics were to be governed through Mohalla Sabhas (i.e. neighbourhood committees), which are instruments of participatory governance within the neighbourhood. The research compares promises and practice for Mohalla Clinics, especially focusing on governance and the politics surrounding it. The authors find that in their current form Mohalla Clinics are limited to providing primary curative healthcare and have shown limited success, although Mohalla Clinic users do save time and expenditure on primary healthcare, and the clinics have led to a more comprehensive form of primary healthcare than in the past. However, Mohalla Clinics are governed in a top-down fashion by the Government of the National Capital Territory-Delhi, and not by urban local bodies or the envisaged neighbourhood committees. As a result, they face problems that may inhibit their functioning in the long term.
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来源期刊
自引率
20.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
24 weeks
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