衡量全民健康覆盖进展:对24个发展中国家的应用

Measuring progress towards universal health coverage: with an application to 24 developing countries

Oxford Review of Economic Policy · 2016
被引 102
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

提出一个综合指数衡量全民健康覆盖进展,涵盖服务覆盖和财务保护,并应用于24个发展中国家,发现高绩效国家(如巴西、哥伦比亚)和低绩效国家(如埃塞俄比亚、印度)的得分差异,以及进展主要来自健康干预覆盖增加而非自付费用减少。

Abstract

The last few years have seen a growing commitment worldwide to universal health coverage (UHC). Yet there is a lack of clarity on how to measure progress towards UHC. We propose a ‘mashup’ index that captures both aspects of UHC: that everyone—irrespective of their ability-to-pay—gets the health services they need; and that nobody suffers undue financial hardship as a result of receiving care. We break service coverage into prevention and treatment, and financial protection into impoverishment and catastrophic spending; we use nationally representative household survey data to adjust population averages to capture inequalities between the poor and better off; we allow non-linear trade-offs between and within the two dimensions of the UHC index; and we express all indicators such that scores run from 0 to 100, and higher scores are better. In a sample of 24 countries for which we have detailed information on UHC-inspired reforms, we find a cluster of high-performing countries with UHC scores of between 79 and 84 (Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and South Africa) and a cluster of low-performing countries with UHC scores in the range 35–57 (Ethiopia, Guatemala, India, Indonesia, and Vietnam). We find that countries have mostly improved their UHC scores between the earliest and latest years for which we have data—by about 5 points on average. However, the improvement has come from increases in receipt of key health interventions, not from reductions in the incidence of out-of-pocket payments on welfare.

全民健康覆盖服务覆盖财务保护不平等调整发展中国家