Using international case studies to critique recent health and aid policies, this book presents strategies to create fairer health services.Based around a series of international case studies, this book illustrates how recent health and aid policies have often failed in their aims. It offers strategies for health care professionals to campaign for quality, discretionary health care systems, accessible to all.Based around a series of international case studies, this book illustrates how recent health and aid policies have often failed in their aims. It offers strategies for health care professionals to campaign for quality, discretionary health care systems, accessible to all.International health and aid policies of the past two decades have had a major impact on the delivery of care in low and middle-income countries. This book argues that these policies have often failed to achieve their main aims, and have in fact contributed to restricted access to family medicine and hospital care. Presenting detailed evidence, and illustrated by case studies, this book describes how international health policies to date have largely resulted in expensive health care for the rich, and disjointed and ineffective services for the poor. As a result, large segments of the population world-wide continue to suffer from unnecessary casualties, pain and impoverishment. International Health and Aid Policies arms health professionals, researchers and policy makers with strategies that will enable them to bridge the gaps between public health, medicine and health policy in order to support robust, comprehensive and accessible health care systems in any political environment.Introduction: overview and purpose; Part I. Aspects of International Health Policies: 1. Donor led policies: analysis of an underlying doctrine; 2. The Achilles heel of international health policies in low and middle income countries; Part II. The Failure of the Aid Paradigm: Poor Disease Control in Developing Countriesl³g