Evaluating the unintended health consequences of poverty alleviation strategies: or what is the relevance of Mohammed Yunus to public health?

Can J Public Health

Groupe de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Santé, Unité de santé internationale, Université de Montréal, Quebéc, Canada.

Published: May 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Public health researchers are now focusing on how interventions, like poverty alleviation strategies (PAS), can influence population health rather than just identifying health determinants.
  • The paper highlights microcredit as a PAS that helps low-income individuals access loans through group solidarity rather than traditional collateral, aiming to bridge the credit gap.
  • It proposes that participation in microcredit can enhance health capital by improving access to resources, suggesting that such initiatives should be integrated into public health interventions for the impoverished.

Article Abstract

Public health researchers are increasingly shifting their attention away from merely documenting those factors that determine health--a solid evidence base on health determinants now exists--to improving our understanding of how various interventions influence population health. This paper argues for greater investigations of the potential unintended health benefits associated with participation in a poverty alleviation strategy (PAS) in low-income countries. We focus on microcredit, a PAS that has been spreading across the developing world. Microcredit aims to address the "credit gap" between the poor and the better off by offering an alternative for the poor to acquire loans: small groups are formed and loans are allocated to members based on group solidarity instead of formal collateral. We argue that microcredit corresponds with activities that will help build up health capital (e.g., greater access to resources) and describe the main pathways from microcredit participation to health. We advocate that microcredit and other potential pro-health PAS be included among the range of interventions considered by public health researchers in improving the health of the poor.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6975682PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03403744DOI Listing

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