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Original Articles

Uneven geographical distribution of medical care: A Ghanaian case study

Pages 205-222 | Published online: 23 Nov 2007
 

Summary

It is well known that the provision of medical care in developing countries is often very unevenly distributed geographically, and one of the most important points made in Maurice King's pioneering Medical Care in Developing Countries, [1967, Oxford University Press: East Africa] was that health facilities such as hospitals have an extremely small effective geographical range. The purpose of this article is to use new statistical data to analyse the problem of uneven distribution of medical care further, and in this way to investigate the social and cultural factors which are indirectly reponsible. The discussion is in terms of Ghana, but much of it may well have a wider relevance.

Notes

Assistant Lecturer in Economics, University of Cambridge.

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