These data paint a fairly bleak picture: villagers’ health is poor; the quality of the public service is abysmal; and private providers who are unregulated and, for the most part, unqualified provide the bulk of health care in the area. Having low-quality public facilities is correlated with some direct health measures. Lung capacity and BMI are lower where the facilities are worse, after controlling for household per capita monthly expenditure, distance from the road, age, and gender. Yet, as we have seen for the self-reported health status, villagers not only do not perceive their health as particularly bad, but they seem fairly content with what they are getting: 81 percent report that their last visit to a private facility made them feel better, and 75 percent report that their last visit to a public facility made them feel better. Self-reported health and well-being measures, as well as the number of symptoms reported in the last month, appear to be uncorrelated with the quality of the public facilities. The quality of the health services may impact health but does not seem to impact people’s perception of their own health or of the health-care system.