Striving for Equity: Healthcare in Sri Lanka from Independence to the Millennium, 1948–2000 (New Perspectives in South Asian History) (Hardback)
Margaret Jones
₹842₹895(6% off)
ISBN 13
9789390122042
Year
2020
Since Sri Lanka's independence in 1948, the government has been committed to providing a healthcare system that reaches all classes, genders and ethnicities. In 1949, health was declared a fundamental right of citizenship by Sri Lanka’s first Minister of Health, S. W. D. Bandaranaike. Since then, Sri Lanka has been consistently held as a model of good health at low cost.
Striving for Equity: Healthcare in Sri Lanka from Independence to the Millennium, 1948–2000 explores the implementation of primary healthcare in Sri Lanka against the background of a 30-year internal conflict. It includes an analysis of how international health organisations like the WHO imposed a global health agenda on the developing world through a study of a joint WHO–Sri Lanka project on tuberculosis control.
The author studies selected health policy developments and programmes in Sri Lanka from 1948–2000 with a special focus on children's health, especially the problem of malnutrition, and the implementation of the childhood immunisation programme.
Along with the continuing incidence of communicable diseases, non-communicable diseases present a growing obstacle to the achievement of equity in the twenty-first century. How the country has responded to this double disease burden problem provides the focus of the final chapter.
Contents: List of Tables and Figure
List of Abbreviations
Glossary
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Sri Lanka as a Model for Health Equity
1. Delivering ‘Medical Services for Health and Not for Disease’
2. ‘Public Enemy Number 1’: Governmental, Medical and Societal Responses to TB
3. ‘The Protection of Child Health is the Protection of the Nation’: Malnutrition and Child Health
4. The Technological Fix for Child Health: Immunisation
5. Non-communicable Diseases: The Double Disease Burden
Conclusion: The Challenge of Health for All in the Twenty-first Century
Bibliography
Index