Literature DB >> 3388076

GOBI versus PHC? Some dangers of selective primary health care.

B Wisner1.   

Abstract

This article enters the debate concerning comprehensive versus selective primary health care by focussing on UNICEF's 'child survival revolution'. It is argued that UNICEF is dangerously mistaken in believing that its present emphasis on selective primary health care is a precursor or 'leading edge' of comprehensive primary health care. The approach of UNICEF--diffusion of a package of technologies by campaigns organized from the top down--is more likely to undermine the social basis for comprehensive care. The kinds of implementation UNICEF has chosen in order to minimize costs and maximize impact on child mortality, namely 'social marketing' via mass media and massive, ad hoc delivery systems seriously undermine the development of grassroots organization among parents and primary health care workers. Indigenuous, local organizations are distorted and limited to conduits of a delivery system. Needs are defined outside the communities affected. In addition, UNICEF's so-called revolution has in common with other selective approaches an ideology accepting as inevitable the health effects of economic crisis in the 1980s, further undermining the confidence of local groups and health workers who might otherwise conceive of their desire to control health conditions as a right. The UNICEF interventions popularly known as GOBI-FFF are 'targetted' at individuals, in particular 'ignorant' mothers. As such they are especially destructive to the process of group formation and self-organization of the poor around their just demands for water and sanitation, land, shelter, and employment. This article concludes that UNICEF's GOBI should either be abandoned or integrated into comprehensive primary health care programs that put parents and local workers in control and that emphasize continuing political struggle for health rights.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1988        PMID: 3388076     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(88)90417-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  5 in total

1.  Learning From History About Reducing Infant Mortality: Contrasting the Centrality of Structural Interventions to Early 20th-Century Successes in the United States to Their Neglect in Current Global Initiatives.

Authors:  Amiya Bhatia; Nancy Krieger; S V Subramanian
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2019-03       Impact factor: 4.911

2.  The Bamako initiative.

Authors:  P Garner
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1989-07-29

3.  Conceptualising global health: theoretical issues and their relevance for teaching.

Authors:  Mike Rowson; Chris Willott; Rob Hughes; Arti Maini; Sophie Martin; J Jaime Miranda; Vicki Pollit; Abi Smith; Rae Wake; John S Yudkin
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2012-11-14       Impact factor: 4.185

4.  Temporal trends and gender differentials in causes of childhood deaths at Ballabgarh, India - need for revisiting child survival strategies.

Authors:  Anand Krishnan; Nawi Ng; Suresh K Kapoor; Chandrakant S Pandav; Peter Byass
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2012-07-26       Impact factor: 3.295

5.  Is universal access to antiretroviral drugs an emerging international norm?

Authors:  Jeremy Youde
Journal:  J Int Relat Dev (Ljubl)       Date:  2008-12-12
  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.