Measuring Progress towards Universal Health Coverage : With an Application to 24 Developing Countries
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. This paper proposes a ‘mashup’ index that captures both aspects of UHC: that ever...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2015
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25239709/measuring-progress-towards-universal-health-coverage-application-24-developing-countries http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23432 |
Summary: | 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. This paper proposes 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. Service coverage is broken down into
prevention and treatment, and financial protection into
impoverishment and catastrophic spending; nationally
representative household survey data are used to adjust
population averages to capture inequalities between the poor
and better off; nonlinear tradeoffs are allowed between and
within the two dimensions of the UHC index; and all
indicators are expressed such that scores run from 0 to 100,
and higher scores are better. In a sample of 24 countries
for which there are detailed information on UHC-inspired
reforms, a cluster of high-performing countries emerges with
UHC scores of between 79 and 84 (Brazil, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Mexico and South Africa) and a cluster of
low-performing countries emerges with UHC scores in the
range 35–57 (Ethiopia, Guatemala, India, Indonesia and
Vietnam). Countries have mostly improved their UHC scores
between the earliest and latest years for which there are
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. |
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