2020
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231660
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Can mutual health organisations influence the quality and the affordability of healthcare provision? The case of the Democratic Republic of Congo

Abstract: Background In their mission to achieve better access to quality healthcare services, mutual health organisations (MHOs) are not limited to providing health insurance. As democratically controlled member organisations, MHOs aim to make people's voices heard. At national level, they seek involvement in the design of social protection policies; at local level, they seek to improve responsiveness of healthcare services to members' needs and expectations. Methods In this qualitative study, we investigated whether M… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This responsibility is usually one undertaken by CBHI (Ndiaye et al, 2018). Given the reality of CBHI low penetration rates in West Africa (Dror et al, 2016; Ridde et al, 2018), they have not always been able to play this role, as in Benin (Ridde et al, 2010) or the Democratic Republic of Congo (Criel et al, 2020). Participants warned of these challenges to sustainability, especially for some dimensions that are beyond their control.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This responsibility is usually one undertaken by CBHI (Ndiaye et al, 2018). Given the reality of CBHI low penetration rates in West Africa (Dror et al, 2016; Ridde et al, 2018), they have not always been able to play this role, as in Benin (Ridde et al, 2010) or the Democratic Republic of Congo (Criel et al, 2020). Participants warned of these challenges to sustainability, especially for some dimensions that are beyond their control.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most healthcare funding comes from household/out-of-pocket, with the background of religious, cultural, and socio-economic problems [8]. In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC-Central Africa), there is a Mutual Health organizations' presence, a democratically controlled member organization struggling to make people's voices heard from local to the national level, which has mostly produced better health outcomes [9]. In contrast, South Africa's unique healthcare system consists of a broad and overused public sector and an underused and over-resourced smaller private sector.…”
Section: Public-private Partnership and Healthcare In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If at all, the population of this country relies on voluntary community-based health insurance schemes [ 17 ]. Therefore, on the path towards UHC, the DRC opted for a social system based on health insurance, in which community health insurances have a predominant role [ 18 ]. This policy is an element of the healthcare reforms with the global agenda for universal access to health.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%