The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation

Faith-based health providers (FBHPs) have been identified as important actors and allies in health service delivery, especially in weak and fragile health systems in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Although FBHPs are still present in a number of SSA countries in varying degrees and capacities, in South Af...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maitisa, Dineo Kwena
Other Authors: Olivier, Jill
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29639
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-296392020-10-06T05:11:37Z The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation Maitisa, Dineo Kwena Olivier, Jill Health Systems Faith-based health providers (FBHPs) have been identified as important actors and allies in health service delivery, especially in weak and fragile health systems in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Although FBHPs are still present in a number of SSA countries in varying degrees and capacities, in South Africa FBHPs were nationalized in the 1970s with some of these missionary facilities later being entirely closed. This historical case study draws on primary and secondary archival data collection as well as in-depth interviews, and discusses the reasoning and some of the results of nationalizing FBHPs in South Africa. We find that FBHPs were nationalized for financial and political reasons in the Apartheid era with the effects of the decision still being felt in the late 1990s. This has resulted in the shifting of efforts of some faith communities from health service delivery to more ‘health-related development programming’ such as orphanages, old age homes, step-down primary clinics and ‘faith inspired organizations’ that promote health through the provision of food, water and shelter. The story of the nationalization of FBHPs into the South African health system is important, especially for other countries still pondering the presence of these types of faith health providers in their national health systems’ architecture. 2019-02-18T11:32:41Z 2019-02-18T11:32:41Z 2018 2019-02-13T12:02:47Z Master Thesis Masters MPH http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29639 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences Department of Public Health and Family Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Health Systems
spellingShingle Health Systems
Maitisa, Dineo Kwena
The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation
description Faith-based health providers (FBHPs) have been identified as important actors and allies in health service delivery, especially in weak and fragile health systems in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Although FBHPs are still present in a number of SSA countries in varying degrees and capacities, in South Africa FBHPs were nationalized in the 1970s with some of these missionary facilities later being entirely closed. This historical case study draws on primary and secondary archival data collection as well as in-depth interviews, and discusses the reasoning and some of the results of nationalizing FBHPs in South Africa. We find that FBHPs were nationalized for financial and political reasons in the Apartheid era with the effects of the decision still being felt in the late 1990s. This has resulted in the shifting of efforts of some faith communities from health service delivery to more ‘health-related development programming’ such as orphanages, old age homes, step-down primary clinics and ‘faith inspired organizations’ that promote health through the provision of food, water and shelter. The story of the nationalization of FBHPs into the South African health system is important, especially for other countries still pondering the presence of these types of faith health providers in their national health systems’ architecture.
author2 Olivier, Jill
author_facet Olivier, Jill
Maitisa, Dineo Kwena
author Maitisa, Dineo Kwena
author_sort Maitisa, Dineo Kwena
title The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation
title_short The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation
title_full The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation
title_fullStr The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation
title_full_unstemmed The role of faith-based health providers in the South African health system: a historical case study of their Nationalisation and Privatisation
title_sort role of faith-based health providers in the south african health system: a historical case study of their nationalisation and privatisation
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29639
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