From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Anna Marriott</b> <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:AMarriott@oxfam.org.uk">AMarriott@oxfam.org.uk</a>></span><br><div class="gmail_quote"><br><br><font size="4"><br><tt><br>
Please join Global Health Check, a new online space designed to provoke
debate and conversation on health financing and service delivery. Global
Health Check is edited by Anna Marriott, Health Policy Advisor for Oxfam
GB, and in the coming weeks the site will feature contributions from a
variety of authors. <br>
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This first post for Global Health Check reviews recent evidence on the
impact of removing user fees for mothers and children in Sierra Leone one
year after the policy was first introduced. To read the post online visit
Global Health Check:<br>
</tt><a href="http://www.globalhealthcheck.org/" target="_blank"><tt>http://www.globalhealthcheck.org/</tt></a><tt><br>
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To subscribe to Global Health Check please visit: </tt><a href="http://www.globalhealthcheck.org/?page_id=199" target="_blank"><tt>http://www.globalhealthcheck.org/?page_id=199</tt></a></font>
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Here is the first post, on our exciting new platform:<br>
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<b>One year on: the impact of removing health care user fees in Sierra
Leone<br>
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While there are still some commentators who seem stuck on the question
of whether removing fees for health care in poor countries is a good idea
at all - thankfully there are others who have moved on to the much more
critical question of not whether this should happen - but how. <br>
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The recent World Health Report on Health Financing for Universal Coverage
leaves no doubt that user fees are a bad idea. In the Director General’s
own words, they constitute "by far the greatest obstacle to progress"
on the path to universal access. <br>
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Learning how to successfully remove fees is best done by looking at those
countries that have made that bold step forward. The introduction of free
care for pregnant women and children in 2010 in Sierra Leone - a post-conflict
nation with a crumbling and severely under-resourced health system and
one of the highest rates of maternal deaths in the world - provides very
relevant lessons for the numerous other low-income countries facing similar
challenges. <div class="im">
<br>READ THE REST OF THIS POSTING ONLINE; ADDRESS ABOVE.<br><br>
Anna Marriott<br>
Health Policy Advisor<br>
Development Finance and Public Services Team Oxfam GB<br>
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