I don’t have a specific intervention/opportunity in mind for the scenario where health spending is broken.
I’m reminded of a survey of several poor countries which revealed many were not following best practice for treating complications in pregnancy and childbirth despite the treatments being cheap and well-known. Digging into it showed there wasn’t a single reason for this, so no single intervention would change things everywhere.
If the underlying reality is locals make bad choices, as normal individuals and health practitioners and policiticians, I don’t think distributing nets for free is going to make much difference. The moral argument for intervening seems to be a lot weaker too. In that set-up we have replaced Singer’s drowning child with an adult who refuses swimming lessons and ignores all advice to stay out of the water.
I don’t have a specific intervention/opportunity in mind for the scenario where health spending is broken.
I’m reminded of a survey of several poor countries which revealed many were not following best practice for treating complications in pregnancy and childbirth despite the treatments being cheap and well-known. Digging into it showed there wasn’t a single reason for this, so no single intervention would change things everywhere.
If the underlying reality is locals make bad choices, as normal individuals and health practitioners and policiticians, I don’t think distributing nets for free is going to make much difference. The moral argument for intervening seems to be a lot weaker too. In that set-up we have replaced Singer’s drowning child with an adult who refuses swimming lessons and ignores all advice to stay out of the water.