Citation Tools
Public health ethics
Paper
Too poor to say no? Health incentives for disadvantaged populations
Download to a citation manager
Download the citation for this article by clicking on one of the following citation managers:
- Cite this article as:
- Too poor to say no? Health incentives for disadvantaged populations
Other content recommended for you
- Which strings attached: ethical considerations for selecting appropriate conditionalities in conditional cash transfer programmes
- Health incentive research and social justice: does the risk of long term harms to systematically disadvantaged groups bear consideration?
- Women and health professionals’ perspectives on a conditional cash transfer programme to improve pregnancy follow-up: a qualitative analysis of the NAITRE randomised controlled study
- Incentives, equity and the Able Chooser Problem
- Effect of a conditional cash transfer programme on infant up-to-date and timely vaccination
- Incentivising safe sex: a randomised trial of conditional cash transfers for HIV and sexually transmitted infection prevention in rural Tanzania
- Perinatal interventions and survival in resource-poor settings: which work, which don't, which have the jury out?
- NAITRE study on the impact of conditional cash transfer on poor pregnancy outcomes in underprivileged women: protocol for a nationwide pragmatic cluster-randomised superiority clinical trial in France
- Does it work to pay people to live healthier lives?
- Effect of a home-based health, nutrition and responsive stimulation intervention and conditional cash transfers on child development and growth: a cluster-randomised controlled trial in Tanzania