In an article posted within the May 8 edition of PLoS Medicine, Rajaie Batniji, an affiliate of a typical Center on Democracy, Development, as well as the Rule of Law at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies (FSI), and Eran Bendavid of FSI's Stanford Health Policy, discovered that a 2010 Lancet study by scientists with the University of Washington that "figured out that about 50 percent the money handed to worldwide governments for providing health treatment services isn't used as planned" is "flawed" and "is not meant to be used to guide judgements about how much money to provide and who should get it," in accordance with a Stanford University news story.
"Once Batniji and Bendavid expelled conflicting and outlying data, for example huge discrepancy between WHO and [International Monetary Fund] estimates and facts about countries which were getting very small amount of cash flow from different countries, 'There ended up being no major displacement of international aid,' Bendavid said," the article tells us
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