Abstract
Market-driven health care reforms and development strategies continue to drive the privatization of health care services across the world. When these measures are implemented, large disparities emerge and are maintained. Using a modified version of the access to care framework developed by Penchansky and Thomas, this paper examines the manifestations of inequity between private for-profit and public emergency care in the Greater Cairo Region and Asyut, Egypt. In-depth interviews with physicians working in both sectors reveals stark disparities in access between these two health care sectors in Egypt. Access issues identified include unaffordable care in the private sector, unavailable medical supplies and overcrowding in public hospitals, as well as a salary gap that drives health care workers from public to private practice, creating staffing shortages in public hospitals. The manifestations of these inequities are often severe, usually tangible, and according to health care providers, embodied in the experiences of service users.
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