The impact of global health initiatives on trust in health care provision under extreme resource scarcity: presenting an agenda for debate from a case study of emergency obstetric care in Northern Tanzania.

PubWeight™: 0.95‹?› | Rank: Top 15%

🔗 View Article (PMC 2891741)

Published in Health Res Policy Syst on May 25, 2010

Authors

Oystein E Olsen1

Author Affiliations

1: Center for International Health, P,O, Box 7024, N-5020, University of Bergen, Norway. oystein.olsen@cih.uib.no.

Articles cited by this

Strategies for reducing maternal mortality: getting on with what works. Lancet (2006) 21.74

Overcoming health-systems constraints to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Lancet (2004) 15.43

Quality of hospital care for seriously ill children in less-developed countries. Lancet (2001) 7.08

The catastrophic failures of public health. Lancet (2004) 4.97

Trust and the development of health care as a social institution. Soc Sci Med (2003) 4.96

Maternal health in poor countries: the broader context and a call for action. Lancet (2006) 4.72

Global health improvement and WHO: shaping the future. Lancet (2003) 3.79

The impact of managed care on patients' trust in medical care and their physicians. JAMA (1996) 3.61

Criteria for priority-setting in health care in Uganda: exploration of stakeholders' values. Bull World Health Organ (2004) 2.30

Iatrogenic poverty. Trop Med Int Health (2003) 2.26

A strategy to improve priority setting in health care institutions. Health Care Anal (2003) 2.08

Setting priorities in health care organizations: criteria, processes, and parameters of success. BMC Health Serv Res (2004) 2.06

Practical lessons from global safe motherhood initiatives: time for a new focus on implementation. Lancet (2007) 1.91

Quality improvement in the developing world. Int J Qual Health Care (2002) 1.88

Global health status: two steps forward, one step back. Lancet (2000) 1.85

A framework for institutionalizing quality assurance. Int J Qual Health Care (2002) 1.73

Human resources for emergency obstetric care in northern Tanzania: distribution of quantity or quality? Hum Resour Health (2005) 1.69

How well do health programmes reach the poor? Lancet (2003) 1.63

Professionalism and the know-do gap: exploring intrinsic motivation among health workers in Tanzania. Health Econ (2010) 1.59

Availability, distribution and use of emergency obstetric care in northern Tanzania. Health Policy Plan (2005) 1.58

Quality cesarean delivery in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso: a comprehensive approach. Int J Gynaecol Obstet (2008) 1.52

Improving poor women's access to maternity care: Findings from a primary care intervention in Burkina Faso. Soc Sci Med (2009) 1.35

User fees plus quality equals improved access to health care: results of a field experiment in Cameroon. Soc Sci Med (1993) 1.34

Injections and self-help: risk and trust in Ugandan health care. Soc Sci Med (1998) 1.32

Evidence, economics and ethics: resource allocation in health services organizations. Healthc Q (2005) 1.17

The Zambia quality assurance program: successes and challenges. Int J Qual Health Care (2002) 1.12

Using willingness to pay to investigate regressiveness of user fees in health facilities in Tanzania. Health Policy Plan (2003) 1.11

Towards improving hospital performance in Uganda and Zambia: reflections and opportunities for autonomy. Health Policy (2002) 1.09

Complicated deliveries, critical care and quality in emergency obstetric care in Northern Tanzania. Int J Gynaecol Obstet (2004) 1.08

The managed care backlash: perceptions and rhetoric in health care policy and the potential for health care reform. Milbank Q (2001) 0.99

Whose priorities count? Comparison of community-identified health problems and Burden-of-Disease-assessed health priorities in a district in Uganda. Health Expect (2002) 0.86

Social capital. BMJ (2001) 0.79

The evaluation of quality assurance: developing and testing practical methods for managers. Int J Qual Health Care (2002) 0.78

Lessons learned in institutionalization of quality assurance programs: an international perspective. Int J Qual Health Care (1995) 0.77