15:30 - 17:00
Room: Arts – Main Lecture Theatre
Stream: Open Stream
Building health systems in Nigeria, 1930-2000: national dilemmas, global contexts
John Manton
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London

This paper focuses on attempts to consolidate the organisation of health services in colonial and independent Nigeria, examining how developing modes of planning in international public health were articulated locally amid the politics of health care, regionalisation, and state and economic planning in Nigeria. It traces the organisational forms, information flows, and agents of planning and consolidation at regional and federal level, as well as the effects of global programmes and international governmental and philanthropic health financing on trends in health services organisation.

Specifically, it examines the shifting politics of disease control, sanitary organisation, health financing, training, and the diversification of health and medical services as bodies such as the World Health Organization, the World Bank, and the Rockefeller Foundation became more prominent in guiding sectoral reform in health services, and the strengthening of developing world health services. Tracing the interplay of programmes, ideas, and policies, it offers a system-wide and comparison-friendly perspective on medicine and health in Nigeria.


Reference:
Th-OS15 Ideas and materials in African global health-P-004
Presenter/s:
John Manton
Presentation type:
Panel
Room:
Arts – Main Lecture Theatre
Date:
Thursday, 13 September
Time:
16:15 - 16:30
Session times:
15:30 - 17:00