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AbortionClergy
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Date
2015-05-05Identifier
oai:repository.library.georgetown.edu:10822/744363Health Progress. 1994 Jul-Aug; 75(6): 6-8.
0882-1577
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http://hdl.handle.net/10822/744363
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Agricultural Insurance in Bangladesh : Promoting Access to Small and Marginal FarmersWorld Bank (Washington, DC, 2013-03-11)Bangladesh is ranked as the world's fifth most exposed country to natural disasters, including floods, cyclones, and droughts. The purpose of this study is to investigate the viability of agricultural insurance in Bangladesh, particularly for small and marginal farmers and to present the Government of Bangladesh (GoB) with a set of options for the future development of agricultural insurance in the country. The current study aims to identify an overall framework for the development of sustainable market-based agricultural insurance in Bangladesh. It also reviews the technical, operational, financial, and institutional issues and options for the introduction of traditional crop and livestock insurance products and for new crop-index products that are suitable to Bangladeshi farmers. This report present a series of practical guidelines and options for GoB and other interested parties to consider for the future development and implementation of crop, livestock and aquaculture insurance in Bangladesh. This study benefits from this international experience (for example, the Indian area-yield and weather-index crop insurance schemes, a Mexican agricultural mutual insurance program, and a Mongolian livestock-mortality index insurance program), which is tailored to the local economic and social context of Bangladesh.
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Health Insurance Handbook : How to Make It WorkSwitlick, Kimberly; Ortiz, Christine; Zurita, Beatriz; Connor, Catherine; Wang, Hong (World Bank, 2012-04-04)Many countries that subscribe to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) have committed to ensuring access to basic health services for their citizens. Health insurance has been considered and promoted as the major financing mechanism to improve access to health services, as well as to provide financial risk protection. In Africa, several countries have already spent scarce time, money, and effort on health insurance initiatives. Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, and Tanzania are just a few of them. However, many of these schemes, both public and private, cover only a small proportion of the population, with the poor less likely to be covered. In fact, unless carefully designed to be pro-poor, health insurance can widen inequity as higher income groups are more likely to be insured and use health care services, taking advantage of their insurance coverage. The purpose of this handbook is to provide policy makers and health insurance designers with practical, action-oriented support that will deepen their understanding of health insurance concepts, help them identify design and implementation challenges, and define realistic steps for the development and scaling up of equitable, efficient, and sustainable health insurance schemes. The handbook takes policy makers and health insurance designers through a step-by-step series of considerations and tasks that need to be achieved. The handbook's philosophy is to not be dogmatic, ideological, or prescriptive. This handbook was prepared to be used in a six-day regional workshop. Clearly, health insurance design is an intensive political and technical process that takes much longer than six days. The expectation for the workshop is that by the end of the week, each team has a clear idea of next steps that they could take back home to engage other stakeholders and move toward scaling up and improving the performance of health insurance in their country.