Can Home Care Workers Help Older Adults Escape Late Life Depression And Anxiety?
Conversations about the mental health of older adults frequently revolve around two things: Alzheimer’s and dementia. While it makes sense that cognitive disorders such as these would occupy a prominent place in the public imagination, the picture they paint of the mental …
Use of Standardized Patients for Healthcare Quality Research in Low and Middle Income Countries
This article, recently published by BMJ Global Health, notes that the use of standardized patients is becoming increasingly common as a means to measure the quality of care. The standardized patient methodology is regarded as a gold standard for quality of care …
Has the Rajiv Aarogyasri Community Health Insurance Scheme of Andhra Pradesh Addressed the Educational Divide in Accessing Healthcare?
Equity of access to healthcare remains a major challenge. Families continue to face financial and non financial barriers to services. Lack of education has been shown to be a key risk factor for catastrophic health expenditure in many countries, including India. This …
Use of Standardized Patients to Assess Quality of Tuberculosis Care: A Pilot, Cross Sectional Study
Existing studies of the quality of tuberculosis care have relied on recall-based patient surveys, questionnaire surveys of knowledge, and prescription or medical record analysis, and the results mostly show the health-care provider’s knowledge rather than actual practice. No study has used standardized …
National standards of care quality would help India enable health coverage for all
This opinion piece was written in 2014, when elections in India were underway. The national parties in India had issued manifestos outlining their visions for the future of health in India. In this article, which appeared in BMJ, the ACCESS Health author …
Innovative Health Insurance in Andhra Pradesh — Has It Worked as Planned?
This research digest summarizes findings from the ACCESS Health research paper on the Aarogyasri health insurance program in Andhra Pradesh, What a Difference a State Makes. The state funded program has increased per capita inpatient admissions. It has also slowed growth in …
Changes in addressing inequalities in access to hospital care in Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra states of India: a difference-in-differences study using repeated cross-sectional surveys
This study, co-authored by ACCESS Health, appeared in BMJ Open. The objective of the study was to compare the effects of the Andhra Pradesh public health insurance program, Rajiv Aarogyasri Health Insurance Scheme, with health financing innovations in Maharashtra, including the Rashtriya …
Using the Indian National Sample Survey data in public health research
The National Sample Survey is a multi stage, multi subject, and multi purpose cross sectional survey, conducted annually. The objective of this paper in the National Medical Journal of India is to inform the reader about the planning and execution of the …
Understanding public drug procurement n India: a comparative qualitative study of five Indian states
This study, which appeared in BMJ Open, provides an initial qualitative comparison of the different procurement models in India to frame questions for future research in this area; to capture the finer differences between the state models through 53 process and price …
Replicating Tamil Nadu’s Drug Procurement Model
This article, which appeared in Economic and Political Weekly, describes the procurement process established by the Tamil Nadu Medical Services Corporation. Most states in India attempted to copy the model of centralized tendering and purchase of drugs. A study of the Kerala …
Recent Comments