|
Salaried
government medical providers were accountable to professional bureaucrats, not patients.
The Health Ministry had little control at the local level of monitoring such things as
quality and physician-patient relationships. It also lacked the mechanisms or resources to
impose sanctions. Many health providers were working under squalid conditions. Some were
performing small daily miracles given available resources; others developed opportunistic
practice patterns, shielded by equally culpable public administrators. |