Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf

Focusing on the period from independence in 1948 to the millennium this book is an historical analysis of the process by which Sri Lanka became a model of how a nation with limited resources could nevertheless achieve health indicators on a par with the developed world through the development of a p...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Orient Blackswan 2021
id oapen-20.500.12657-47401
record_format dspace
spelling oapen-20.500.12657-474012021-03-19T02:28:18Z Striving for Equity Jones, Margaret healthcare history tuberculosis Sri Lanka bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine::MB Medicine: general issues::MBN Public health & preventive medicine Focusing on the period from independence in 1948 to the millennium this book is an historical analysis of the process by which Sri Lanka became a model of how a nation with limited resources could nevertheless achieve health indicators on a par with the developed world through the development of a primary healthcare system. In so doing it had to interact and negotiate with global health actors such as the World Health Organization while maintaining its own agency. Based on a close reading of original archival sources it is an in-depth exploration of these questions viewed through a series of case studies which highlight both the successes which contributed to this outcome and the inadequacies of those efforts when seen at the micro level. A primary health care infrastructure is an essential prerequisite for the delivery of preventive health care; how this was developed and delivered to the entire population forms the first substantive chapter. Since the incidence of tuberculosis in a community serves as a marker of a country’s achievement in meeting basic needs and establishing social justice there follows an examination of policies to control TB. The most vulnerable group in a nation are its children and they are also the source of a nation’s future human capital. Two chapters discuss children’s health; firstly the problem of childhood malnutrition and secondly the implementation of the successful immunization programme. Demographic change means a double disease burden of non-communicable diseases alongside communicable diseases and how this considerable challenge is met is the subject of the last chapter. Furthermore these topics enable a discussion of the significance and problems of an international policy transfer to less well-resourced environments. 2021-03-18T14:02:35Z 2021-03-18T14:02:35Z 2020 book https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/47401 eng New Perspectives in South Asian History application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf Orient Blackswan 06afbe9e-f316-4cad-9514-a9bdd5f4032f d859fbd3-d884-4090-a0ec-baf821c9abfd Wellcome 156 Wellcome Trust Wellcome open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language English
description Focusing on the period from independence in 1948 to the millennium this book is an historical analysis of the process by which Sri Lanka became a model of how a nation with limited resources could nevertheless achieve health indicators on a par with the developed world through the development of a primary healthcare system. In so doing it had to interact and negotiate with global health actors such as the World Health Organization while maintaining its own agency. Based on a close reading of original archival sources it is an in-depth exploration of these questions viewed through a series of case studies which highlight both the successes which contributed to this outcome and the inadequacies of those efforts when seen at the micro level. A primary health care infrastructure is an essential prerequisite for the delivery of preventive health care; how this was developed and delivered to the entire population forms the first substantive chapter. Since the incidence of tuberculosis in a community serves as a marker of a country’s achievement in meeting basic needs and establishing social justice there follows an examination of policies to control TB. The most vulnerable group in a nation are its children and they are also the source of a nation’s future human capital. Two chapters discuss children’s health; firstly the problem of childhood malnutrition and secondly the implementation of the successful immunization programme. Demographic change means a double disease burden of non-communicable diseases alongside communicable diseases and how this considerable challenge is met is the subject of the last chapter. Furthermore these topics enable a discussion of the significance and problems of an international policy transfer to less well-resourced environments.
title Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf
spellingShingle Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf
title_short Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf
title_full Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf
title_fullStr Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf
title_full_unstemmed Bookshelf_NBK566672.pdf
title_sort bookshelf_nbk566672.pdf
publisher Orient Blackswan
publishDate 2021
_version_ 1771297629495361536