Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.

BACKGROUND: Health outcomes in developing countries continue to lag the developed world, and many countries are not on target to meet the Millennium Development Goals. The private health sector provides much of the care in many developing countries (e.g., approximately 50 percent in Sub-Saharan Afri...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nicholas E Burger, Daniel Kopf, Connor P Spreng, Joanne Yoong, Neeraj Sood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3286467?pdf=render
_version_ 1819227793933729792
author Nicholas E Burger
Daniel Kopf
Connor P Spreng
Joanne Yoong
Neeraj Sood
author_facet Nicholas E Burger
Daniel Kopf
Connor P Spreng
Joanne Yoong
Neeraj Sood
author_sort Nicholas E Burger
collection DOAJ
description BACKGROUND: Health outcomes in developing countries continue to lag the developed world, and many countries are not on target to meet the Millennium Development Goals. The private health sector provides much of the care in many developing countries (e.g., approximately 50 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa), but private providers are often poorly integrated into the health system. Efforts to improve health systems performance will need to include the private sector and increase its contributions to national health goals. However, the literature on constraints private health care providers face is limited. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We analyze data from a survey of private health facilities in Kenya and Ghana to evaluate growth constraints facing private providers. A significant portion of facilities (Ghana: 62 percent; Kenya: 40 percent) report limited access to finance as the most significant barrier they face; only a small minority of facilities report using formal credit institutions to finance day to day operations (Ghana: 6 percent; Kenya: 11 percent). Other important barriers include corruption, crime, limited demand for goods and services, and poor public infrastructure. Most facilities have paper-based rather than electronic systems for patient records (Ghana: 30 percent; Kenya: 22 percent), accounting (Ghana: 45 percent; Kenya: 27 percent), and inventory control (Ghana: 41 percent; Kenya: 24 percent). A majority of clinics in both countries report undertaking activities to improve provider skills and to monitor the level and quality of care they provide. However, only a minority of pharmacies report undertaking such activities. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results suggest that improved access to finance and improving business processes especially among pharmacies would support improved contributions by private health facilities. These strategies might be complementary if providers are more able to take advantage of increased access to finance when they have the business processes in place for operating a successful business and health facility.
first_indexed 2024-12-23T10:47:02Z
format Article
id doaj.art-3656e77b4a1144dbb50120644b46bdf2
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-23T10:47:02Z
publishDate 2012-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-3656e77b4a1144dbb50120644b46bdf22022-12-21T17:50:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0172e2788510.1371/journal.pone.0027885Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.Nicholas E BurgerDaniel KopfConnor P SprengJoanne YoongNeeraj SoodBACKGROUND: Health outcomes in developing countries continue to lag the developed world, and many countries are not on target to meet the Millennium Development Goals. The private health sector provides much of the care in many developing countries (e.g., approximately 50 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa), but private providers are often poorly integrated into the health system. Efforts to improve health systems performance will need to include the private sector and increase its contributions to national health goals. However, the literature on constraints private health care providers face is limited. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We analyze data from a survey of private health facilities in Kenya and Ghana to evaluate growth constraints facing private providers. A significant portion of facilities (Ghana: 62 percent; Kenya: 40 percent) report limited access to finance as the most significant barrier they face; only a small minority of facilities report using formal credit institutions to finance day to day operations (Ghana: 6 percent; Kenya: 11 percent). Other important barriers include corruption, crime, limited demand for goods and services, and poor public infrastructure. Most facilities have paper-based rather than electronic systems for patient records (Ghana: 30 percent; Kenya: 22 percent), accounting (Ghana: 45 percent; Kenya: 27 percent), and inventory control (Ghana: 41 percent; Kenya: 24 percent). A majority of clinics in both countries report undertaking activities to improve provider skills and to monitor the level and quality of care they provide. However, only a minority of pharmacies report undertaking such activities. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results suggest that improved access to finance and improving business processes especially among pharmacies would support improved contributions by private health facilities. These strategies might be complementary if providers are more able to take advantage of increased access to finance when they have the business processes in place for operating a successful business and health facility.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3286467?pdf=render
spellingShingle Nicholas E Burger
Daniel Kopf
Connor P Spreng
Joanne Yoong
Neeraj Sood
Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.
PLoS ONE
title Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.
title_full Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.
title_fullStr Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.
title_full_unstemmed Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.
title_short Healthy firms: constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in Ghana and Kenya.
title_sort healthy firms constraints to growth among private health sector facilities in ghana and kenya
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3286467?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT nicholaseburger healthyfirmsconstraintstogrowthamongprivatehealthsectorfacilitiesinghanaandkenya
AT danielkopf healthyfirmsconstraintstogrowthamongprivatehealthsectorfacilitiesinghanaandkenya
AT connorpspreng healthyfirmsconstraintstogrowthamongprivatehealthsectorfacilitiesinghanaandkenya
AT joanneyoong healthyfirmsconstraintstogrowthamongprivatehealthsectorfacilitiesinghanaandkenya
AT neerajsood healthyfirmsconstraintstogrowthamongprivatehealthsectorfacilitiesinghanaandkenya