• Int J Health Serv · Jan 2012

    Ecuador's silent health reform.

    • Pierre De Paepe, Ramiro Echeverría Tapia, Edison Aguilar Santacruz, and Jean-Pierre Unger.
    • Institute of Tropical Medicine, Department of Public Health, Antwerp, Belgium. jpunger@itg.be
    • Int J Health Serv. 2012 Jan 1; 42 (2): 219-33.

    AbstractHealth sector reform was implemented in many Latin American countries in the 1980s and 1990s, leading to reduced public expenditure on health, limitations on public provision for disease control, and a minimum package of services, with concomitant growth of the private sector. At first sight, Ecuador appeared to follow a different pattern: no formal reform was implemented, despite many plans to reform the Ministry of Health and social health insurance. The authors conducted an in-depth review and analysis of published and gray literature on the Ecuadorian health sector from 1990 onward. They found that although neoliberal reform of the health sector was not openly implemented, many of its typical elements are present: severe reduction of public budgets, "universal" health insurance with limited coverage for targeted groups, and contracting out to private providers. The health sector remains segmented and fragmented, explaining the population's poor health status. The leftist Correa government has prepared an excellent long-term plan to unite services of the Ministry of Health and social security, but implementation is extremely slow. In conclusion, the health sector in Ecuador suffered a "silent" neoliberal reform. President Correa's progressive government intends to reverse this, increasing public budgets for health, but hesitates to introduce needed radical changes.

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