The document summarizes a project in Myanmar that used social franchising to improve access to healthcare. It found that: 1) A social franchising program called SPH increased optimal treatment of childhood diarrhea and malaria in rural areas. 2) The quality of care provided by SPH and SQH providers improved, such as their ability to correctly diagnose and treat pediatric malaria. 3) SQH providers successfully reached low-income tuberculosis patients in urban areas, treating a higher percentage of patients in the lowest wealth quintile compared to the national average. 4) The SPH program was found to be a cost-effective way to improve diarrhea treatment, costing $431 per disability-adjusted life year