Abstract:
Health Service Delivery (HSD) is in the public interest of
any nation not only because healthcare access and
delivery form part of the SDGs package that the world
agreed to the pursuit of, but also because health is a
recognized human right. Unfortunately, access to health,
which as a right is supposed to be universal, is afflicted by
weak healthcare systems services in especially developing
countries. When healthcare service delivery, for which
government bears the primary responsibility to deliver as
the “First Sector” and the Private Sector or the “Second
Sector” delivers it for the well-to-do, the responsibility
falls on the “Third Sector” or NGOs.
Description:
The study found that NGOs have made several
contributions to the health sector including the funding of
health services and supporting the existing health units to
improve health service provision, and engagement in
research to inform and influence public policy as financial limitations, political
interference, and donor interests negatively influenced the
performance of the NGOs. The research also found that
the approaches adopted to ensure health service provision
include; advocacy, lobbying, and encouraging community
involvement in the health projects and activities.