
Detention of Poor Patients in Burundian Hospitals
This 75-page report documents how Burundian hospitals in 2005 detained hundreds of indigent patients, sometimes in inhumane conditions. Many of those detained were women giving birth who unexpectedly needed caesarian deliveries. In some cases, hospital authorities refused further medical care to those who could not pay their bills and forced them to vacate their beds for wealthier incoming patients.
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ISBN: A1808
ISBN: A1808
Table of Contents
- A High Price to Pay
- Acronyms
- Map of Burundi
- I. Summary
- II. Recommendations
- III. Methodology
- IV. Background: Health, Poverty and Conflict
- V. Detention in Public Hospitals for Lack of Payment
- VI. Consequences of Hospital Detention
- VII. The Government Response
- VIII. Government Measures Aimed to Improve Access to Health Care
- IX. Government Failure to Address Other Structural Problems of the Health System
- X. Keeping the System Alive: The Dilemma of Being a Benefactor
- XI. The Role of the International Community in the Health Sector
- XII. Human Rights Standards
- XIII. Acknowledgements
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