Politics of Health Care Reforms in Kenya and their Failure
Author(s) -
Daniel Künzler
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
sozialpolitik ch
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2297-8224
DOI - 10.18753/2297-8224-64
Subject(s) - neglect , politics , health care , categorical variable , health policy , work (physics) , health care reform , political science , social determinants of health , economic growth , development economics , medicine , economics , nursing , law , mechanical engineering , engineering , machine learning , computer science
The current literature on the politics of social policy has two major shortcomings: health care reforms are undertheoretized and research on Anglophone Africa tends to neglect health reforms. To tackle this, a case study on Kenya presents (failed) reforms such as universal or categorical free health care or the introduction of health insurance and the expansion of its coverage. The case study clearly shows that there is no single theoretical explanation of social policy reforms or their failure. Rather, there are different combination of factors at work in Kenya.
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