TY - JOUR KW - Brazil KW - Colombia KW - Communicable Disease Control KW - Female KW - Health Care Reform KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Local Government KW - Male KW - National Health Programs KW - Outcome Assessment (Health Care) KW - Policy Making KW - Politics KW - Risk Assessment AU - Kalk A AU - Fleischer K AB -

Decentralization policies are an integrated component of health sector reform in an increasing number of countries. The ability of such policies to improve the health system's quality and efficiency is backed up by limited scientific evidence. This study intends to evaluate the impact of decentralization on a specialized field of disease control (leprosy control) in Colombia and Brazil. It analyses the respective juridical base, epidemiological indicators and local publications. Furthermore, 39 semi-structured interviews with key informants were conducted. In both countries, the devolution of technical responsibility and financial resources to the municipalities was the implemented form of decentralization. Access to preventive and curative health care and the community participation in decision-making improved clearly only in Brazil. The decentralization to private providers in Colombia had dubious effects on service quality in general and still more on public health. The flow of finances (including finance collection through state-owned taxes instead of insurance companies) seemed to be better controlled in Brazil. Leprosy control in Brazil took advantage of the decentralization process; in Colombia, it came close to a collapse.

BT - Leprosy review C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15072128?dopt=Abstract CN - Infolep Library - available DA - 2004 Mar IS - 1 J2 - Lepr Rev LA - eng N2 -

Decentralization policies are an integrated component of health sector reform in an increasing number of countries. The ability of such policies to improve the health system's quality and efficiency is backed up by limited scientific evidence. This study intends to evaluate the impact of decentralization on a specialized field of disease control (leprosy control) in Colombia and Brazil. It analyses the respective juridical base, epidemiological indicators and local publications. Furthermore, 39 semi-structured interviews with key informants were conducted. In both countries, the devolution of technical responsibility and financial resources to the municipalities was the implemented form of decentralization. Access to preventive and curative health care and the community participation in decision-making improved clearly only in Brazil. The decentralization to private providers in Colombia had dubious effects on service quality in general and still more on public health. The flow of finances (including finance collection through state-owned taxes instead of insurance companies) seemed to be better controlled in Brazil. Leprosy control in Brazil took advantage of the decentralization process; in Colombia, it came close to a collapse.

PY - 2004 SP - 67 EP - 78 T2 - Leprosy review TI - The decentralization of the health system in Colombia and Brazil and its impact on leprosy control. UR - https://leprosyreview.org/article/75/1/06-7078 VL - 75 SN - 0305-7518 ER -