Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?

The United Kingdom has in many respects the archetypal centrally planned, publicly financed health care system in the form of National Health Service (NHS), established in 1948 in a time of great austerity after Second World War. It is largely fund...

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Main Author: Smith, Peter C.
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/184761516173371689/Advancing-universal-health-coverage-what-developing-countries-can-learn-from-the-English-experience
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29183
id okr-10986-29183
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-291832021-05-25T09:10:03Z Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience? Smith, Peter C. UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE HEALTH FINANCE GOVERNANCE ACCOUNTABILITY POLITICAL CONTEXT HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM UNICO UHC The United Kingdom has in many respects the archetypal centrally planned, publicly financed health care system in the form of National Health Service (NHS), established in 1948 in a time of great austerity after Second World War. It is largely funded from general taxation, and provides wide coverage of most mainstream health services, with little recourse to user charges. It offers strong financial protection against the costs of health care and enjoys high public approval ratings. Its principal shortcomings have been weaknesses in service quality, often in the form of long waiting times, and sometimes relating to clinical quality. This paper concentrates on the experience in England, which accounts for 84 percent of the UK population of 64.6 million. The system of health service coverage adopted in the NHS is very simple. There is no explicit requirement to enroll in an insurance plan. Instead, citizens must register with a general practitioner (GP) of their choice. GPs act as a gatekeeper to nonemergency secondary care and prescription medicines and devices. Apart from small fees for some prescription medicines (from which many citizens are exempt), patients are not directly charged for access to NHS care. Throughout most of its history, the NHS model of governance has entailed strong central control by the national ministry, with local administration responsible for detailed local planning and purchasing. The forms of local administration have varied. In the early years of the NHS they were primarily local NHS hospitals, with separate committees for oversight of primary care. Since 1974, local health authorities have assumed the role of oversight of local services, currently covering, on average, populations of 250,000. 2018-01-18T20:31:00Z 2018-01-18T20:31:00Z 2018-01 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/184761516173371689/Advancing-universal-health-coverage-what-developing-countries-can-learn-from-the-English-experience http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29183 English Universal Health Coverage Studies Series;No. 40 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper United Kingdom
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
HEALTH FINANCE
GOVERNANCE
ACCOUNTABILITY
POLITICAL CONTEXT
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
UNICO
UHC
spellingShingle UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
HEALTH FINANCE
GOVERNANCE
ACCOUNTABILITY
POLITICAL CONTEXT
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
UNICO
UHC
Smith, Peter C.
Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?
geographic_facet United Kingdom
relation Universal Health Coverage Studies Series;No. 40
description The United Kingdom has in many respects the archetypal centrally planned, publicly financed health care system in the form of National Health Service (NHS), established in 1948 in a time of great austerity after Second World War. It is largely funded from general taxation, and provides wide coverage of most mainstream health services, with little recourse to user charges. It offers strong financial protection against the costs of health care and enjoys high public approval ratings. Its principal shortcomings have been weaknesses in service quality, often in the form of long waiting times, and sometimes relating to clinical quality. This paper concentrates on the experience in England, which accounts for 84 percent of the UK population of 64.6 million. The system of health service coverage adopted in the NHS is very simple. There is no explicit requirement to enroll in an insurance plan. Instead, citizens must register with a general practitioner (GP) of their choice. GPs act as a gatekeeper to nonemergency secondary care and prescription medicines and devices. Apart from small fees for some prescription medicines (from which many citizens are exempt), patients are not directly charged for access to NHS care. Throughout most of its history, the NHS model of governance has entailed strong central control by the national ministry, with local administration responsible for detailed local planning and purchasing. The forms of local administration have varied. In the early years of the NHS they were primarily local NHS hospitals, with separate committees for oversight of primary care. Since 1974, local health authorities have assumed the role of oversight of local services, currently covering, on average, populations of 250,000.
format Working Paper
author Smith, Peter C.
author_facet Smith, Peter C.
author_sort Smith, Peter C.
title Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?
title_short Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?
title_full Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?
title_fullStr Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?
title_full_unstemmed Advancing Universal Health Coverage : What Developing Countries Can Learn from the English Experience?
title_sort advancing universal health coverage : what developing countries can learn from the english experience?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/184761516173371689/Advancing-universal-health-coverage-what-developing-countries-can-learn-from-the-English-experience
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29183
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