Abstract

The Disparity of Motivational Drivers in International Health Care Systems

Highlights

  • Healthcare systems are highly convoluted and nontransparent systems that face the immense challenge of disparaging economic and ethical drivers from each player in this complicated continuum

  • The WHO outlines that access is impeded internationally due to three fundamental problems: 1) the availability of resources and immediate access to latest technology and treatment modalities; 2) overreliance on direct payments, whether completely or in part, that can lead to impoverishment; and 3) economic slack due to resource wastage [3]

  • While the poorest countries suffer from little access to any health care, no country can claim universal access to the best treatment options, and most developed countries fall short to some extent by requiring direct payments, even where these costs may eventually be reimbursed [4]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Healthcare systems are highly convoluted and nontransparent systems that face the immense challenge of disparaging economic and ethical drivers from each player in this complicated continuum. Access to health care is an extraordinary human need and priority and many developing nations have made significant improvements toward this end over the past decade, this ethical imperative is far from universal.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call