Benefits of Integrating Microfinance and Health Protection Services Published
Oxford Journals' Health Policy and Planning has published a paper on the benefits of integrating microfinance and health protection services for very poor families and says the program should be expanded.
Davis, CA, March 12, 2011 --(PR.com)-- The March 2011 edition of Oxford Journals’ Health Policy and Planning has published a paper that examines the benefits of integrating microfinance with health protection services and makes recommendations that can inform policy and program design for expansion of the practice.
After a review of multiple studies, the paper concludes that microfinance institutions (MFIs) are capable of contributing to health improvements by increasing knowledge that leads to behavioral changes, and enhancing access to health services through addressing financial, geographic and other barriers. The authors found evidence of positive health outcomes in nutrition, infectious disease, maternal and child health, domestic violence, and malaria.
Illness and poor health are widely recognized as important contributors to trapping families in poverty, sometimes despite their best efforts to start and sustain small businesses and other income-generating activity. Even one episode of a serious illness can cause a family to lose valuable assets and to slide back into grinding poverty. This paper is important because it highlights the important opportunity for health and microfinance to be combined as a more effective strategy towards greater economic security among the world’s poor. The poor need access to a coordinated set of financial and other development services to improve household resources and health. The studies analyzed provide promising evidence that MFIs offer a unique and underutilized opportunity that could be more widely deployed for the delivery of health-related services to those most in need.
As the number of studies on the practice grows and more microfinance practitioners learn of the potential benefits and low cost of integration, value-added microfinance is expanding and being adapted for application in new regions and settings.
The paper’s lead author, Sheila Leatherman, a professor at the Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, pointed out that, while the quality of some of the studies is uneven, the evidence of positive health benefits in diverse areas such as maternal and child health, malaria and other infectious disease, and domestic violence would indicate that the microfinance sector offers an underutilized opportunity for delivery of health-related services to many hard-to-reach populations.
The paper recommends that more rigorous research is needed to inform policy and guide program implementation, but useful evidence now exists to point towards a ”clear opportunity, perhaps even an imperative, for the microfinance and public health communities to engage with each other more actively and collaboratively.”
Ms. Leatherman is a member of Freedom from Hunger’s Board of Trustees. Her co-authors on the paper are Marcia Metcalfe, Director of Microfinance and Health Protection, Freedom from Hunger; Kimberley Geissler, PhD student and research assistant at University of North Carolina; and Christopher Dunford, PhD, President and CEO of Freedom from Hunger.
The PDF of the research report, “Integrating microfinance and health strategies: examining the evidence to inform policy and practice,” can be found at www.ffhtechnical.org/resources/research-reports.
Founded in 1946, Freedom from Hunger is an international development organization that works in 17 countries around the globe. They bring innovative and sustainable self-help solutions to the fight against chronic hunger and poverty and are currently reaching more than 2.4 million women and their families—a total of over 14 million people. Freedom from Hunger has received the coveted 4-star rating with Charity Navigator for 4 consecutive years and has consistently been a top-rated charity with the American Institute of Philanthropy. www.freedomfromhunger.org
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After a review of multiple studies, the paper concludes that microfinance institutions (MFIs) are capable of contributing to health improvements by increasing knowledge that leads to behavioral changes, and enhancing access to health services through addressing financial, geographic and other barriers. The authors found evidence of positive health outcomes in nutrition, infectious disease, maternal and child health, domestic violence, and malaria.
Illness and poor health are widely recognized as important contributors to trapping families in poverty, sometimes despite their best efforts to start and sustain small businesses and other income-generating activity. Even one episode of a serious illness can cause a family to lose valuable assets and to slide back into grinding poverty. This paper is important because it highlights the important opportunity for health and microfinance to be combined as a more effective strategy towards greater economic security among the world’s poor. The poor need access to a coordinated set of financial and other development services to improve household resources and health. The studies analyzed provide promising evidence that MFIs offer a unique and underutilized opportunity that could be more widely deployed for the delivery of health-related services to those most in need.
As the number of studies on the practice grows and more microfinance practitioners learn of the potential benefits and low cost of integration, value-added microfinance is expanding and being adapted for application in new regions and settings.
The paper’s lead author, Sheila Leatherman, a professor at the Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, pointed out that, while the quality of some of the studies is uneven, the evidence of positive health benefits in diverse areas such as maternal and child health, malaria and other infectious disease, and domestic violence would indicate that the microfinance sector offers an underutilized opportunity for delivery of health-related services to many hard-to-reach populations.
The paper recommends that more rigorous research is needed to inform policy and guide program implementation, but useful evidence now exists to point towards a ”clear opportunity, perhaps even an imperative, for the microfinance and public health communities to engage with each other more actively and collaboratively.”
Ms. Leatherman is a member of Freedom from Hunger’s Board of Trustees. Her co-authors on the paper are Marcia Metcalfe, Director of Microfinance and Health Protection, Freedom from Hunger; Kimberley Geissler, PhD student and research assistant at University of North Carolina; and Christopher Dunford, PhD, President and CEO of Freedom from Hunger.
The PDF of the research report, “Integrating microfinance and health strategies: examining the evidence to inform policy and practice,” can be found at www.ffhtechnical.org/resources/research-reports.
Founded in 1946, Freedom from Hunger is an international development organization that works in 17 countries around the globe. They bring innovative and sustainable self-help solutions to the fight against chronic hunger and poverty and are currently reaching more than 2.4 million women and their families—a total of over 14 million people. Freedom from Hunger has received the coveted 4-star rating with Charity Navigator for 4 consecutive years and has consistently been a top-rated charity with the American Institute of Philanthropy. www.freedomfromhunger.org
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Contact
Freedom From Hunger
Beth Harrison
530-758-6200
www.freedomfromhunger.org
Contact
Beth Harrison
530-758-6200
www.freedomfromhunger.org
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