What are linkages?
Top Linkages refer to all types of partnership agreements between institutions, which aim to facilitate the access, management or financing of social security. Institutions involved may include: • Other micro-insurance system(s); • Civil society organizations (local NGO, associations, etc.); • Micro-finance institutions; • Associations or federations of mutual health organizations; • Networks of cooperatives, trade unions; • Outsourced technical management providers such as Indian TPAs, public management centres, accounting experts; • Pharmaceutical industry or other industries; • Private or public insurance companies; • Social security funds; • Social assistance programmes; • Public health and prevention programs; • Local or national governments; • International cooperation (International NGO, United Nations, global social trust, global fund) Linkages may include: • Subsidies and redistribution; • Financial consolidation (reinsurance, guarantee funds); • Technical support and advice;
Related Questions
- If I am obtaining culture cell lines from ATCC that do not have personal identifiers, codes, or linkages maintained by ATCC, do I need to submit to the IRB?
- I don understand the difference between glycosidic linkages in starch and cellulose, why are they important?
- What linkages currently exist between registries and trading regimes?