Rethinking Universal Health Coverage: A qualitative study of patient organisation perspectives on the Turkish health‐care system

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Abstract

Universal health coverage (UHC) has been elevated to the status of a global policy target, but this was at the expense of losing its aspirational meaning. As a case in point, Turkey has been one of the countries that has achieved UHC, according to the technocratic definition. This article employs a combination of deductive and inductive thematic analysis methods to explore patient organisation (PO) perspectives on the Turkish health-care system based on 26 respondent interviews from 19 POs in Istanbul. Highlighting the inadequacy of the technocratic definition of UHC, the article maintains that an analysis of PO perspectives opens the way for a nuanced and bottom-up assessment of essential service coverage and financial protection by identifying elusive gaps in both dimensions that would otherwise be lost in generalist evaluations. The findings also underline the importance of keeping intact the UHC’s aspirational element to enable POs to participate in the politics of priority setting in health care.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1372-1387
Number of pages16
JournalSociology of Health & Illness
Volume43
Issue number6
Early online date4 Jun 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 1 Jul 2021

Keywords

  • experiential expertise
  • health-care policy
  • helath-care system
  • patient citizenship
  • patient constituencies
  • patient organisations
  • Turkey
  • Universal health coverage

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