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Evolution and Patterns of Global Health Financing 1995-2014: Development Assistance for Health, and Government, Prepaid Private, and Out-Of-Pocket Health Spending in 184 Countries Publisher Pubmed



Dieleman J1 ; Campbell M1 ; Chapin A1 ; Eldrenkamp E1 ; Fan VY2, 3, 6 ; Haakenstad A1 ; Kates J7 ; Liu Y1 ; Matyasz T1 ; Micah A1 ; Reynolds A1 ; Sadat N1 ; Schneider MT1 ; Sorensen R1 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Dieleman J1
  2. Campbell M1
  3. Chapin A1
  4. Eldrenkamp E1
  5. Fan VY2, 3, 6
  6. Haakenstad A1
  7. Kates J7
  8. Liu Y1
  9. Matyasz T1
  10. Micah A1
  11. Reynolds A1
  12. Sadat N1
  13. Schneider MT1
  14. Sorensen R1
  15. Evans T8
  16. Evans D8
  17. Kurowski C8
  18. Tandon A8
  19. Abbas KM9
  20. Abera SF10, 12
  21. Ahmad Kiadaliri A13
  22. Ahmed KY14
  23. Ahmed MB15
  24. Alam K16, 17, 18
  25. Alizadehnavaei R19
  26. Alkerwi A20
  27. Amini E21, 22
  28. Ammar W25
  29. Amrock SM26
  30. Antonio CAT27
  31. Atey TM11
  32. Avilaburgos L28
  33. Awasthi A29
  34. Barac A30
  35. Bernal OA31
  36. Beyene AS32
  37. Beyene TJ34, 35
  38. Birungi C36
  39. Bizuayehu HM37
  40. Breitborde NJK38
  41. Cahuanahurtado L28
  42. Castro RE39
  43. Catalalopez F40, 41
  44. Dalal K42
  45. Dandona L1, 43
  46. Dandona R1, 43
  47. De Jager P44, 45
  48. Dharmaratne SD46
  49. Dubey M47
  50. Farinha CSES48, 49
  51. Faro A50
  52. Feigl AB4
  53. Fischer F51
  54. Fitchett JRA5
  55. Foigt N52
  56. Giref AZ34
  57. Gupta R53
  58. Hamidi S54
  59. Harb HL25
  60. Hay SI1, 55
  61. Hendrie D56
  62. Horino M57
  63. Jurisson M62
  64. Jakovljevic MB58
  65. Javanbakht M59
  66. John D60
  67. Jonas JB61
  68. Karimi SM63
  69. Khang YH64
  70. Khubchandani J65
  71. Kim YJ66
  72. Kinge JM67
  73. Krohn KJ1
  74. Kumar GA43
  75. Magdy Abd El Razek H68
  76. Magdy Abd El Razek M69
  77. Majeed A70
  78. Malekzadeh R23
  79. Masiye F71
  80. Meier T72
  81. Meretoja A73, 75
  82. Miller TR76, 77
  83. Mirrakhimov EM78, 79
  84. Mohammed S80, 81
  85. Nangia V82
  86. Olgiati S83
  87. Osman AS84
  88. Owolabi MO85, 86
  89. Patel T87
  90. Paternina Caicedo AJ88, 89
  91. Pereira DM90
  92. Perelman J91
  93. Polinder S92
  94. Rafay A93, 94
  95. Rahimimovaghar V24
  96. Rai RK95
  97. Ram U47
  98. Ranabhat CL96, 97
  99. Roba HS33
  100. Salama J1
  101. Savic M67
  102. Sepanlou SG23
  103. Shrime MG98
  104. Talongwa RT99
  105. Te Ao BJ100
  106. Tediosi F101
  107. Tesema AG11
  108. Thomson AJ102
  109. Tobegai R103
  110. Topormadry R104, 105
  111. Undurraga EA106
  112. Vasankari T107
  113. Violante FS108
  114. Werdecker A109
  115. Wijeratne T74, 110
  116. Xu G111
  117. Yonemoto N112
  118. Younis MZ113
  119. Yu C114, 115
  120. Zaidi Z116
  121. El Sayed Zaki M117
  122. Murray CJL1

Source: The Lancet Published:2017


Abstract

Background: An adequate amount of prepaid resources for health is important to ensure access to health services and for the pursuit of universal health coverage. Previous studies on global health financing have described the relationship between economic development and health financing. In this study, we further explore global health financing trends and examine how the sources of funds used, types of services purchased, and development assistance for health disbursed change with economic development. We also identify countries that deviate from the trends. Methods: We estimated national health spending by type of care and by source, including development assistance for health, based on a diverse set of data including programme reports, budget data, national estimates, and 964 National Health Accounts. These data represent health spending for 184 countries from 1995 through 2014. We converted these data into a common inflation-adjusted and purchasing power-adjusted currency, and used non-linear regression methods to model the relationship between health financing, time, and economic development. Findings: Between 1995 and 2014, economic development was positively associated with total health spending and a shift away from a reliance on development assistance and out-of-pocket (OOP) towards government spending. The largest absolute increase in spending was in high-income countries, which increased to purchasing power-adjusted $5221 per capita based on an annual growth rate of 3.0%. The largest health spending growth rates were in upper-middle-income (5.9) and lower-middle-income groups (5.0), which both increased spending at more than 5% per year, and spent $914 and $267 per capita in 2014, respectively. Spending in low-income countries grew nearly as fast, at 4.6%, and health spending increased from $51 to $120 per capita. In 2014, 59.2% of all health spending was financed by the government, although in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, 29.1% and 58.0% of spending was OOP spending and 35.7% and 3.0% of spending was development assistance. Recent growth in development assistance for health has been tepid; between 2010 and 2016, it grew annually at 1.8%, and reached US$37.6 billion in 2016. Nonetheless, there is a great deal of variation revolving around these averages. 29 countries spend at least 50% more than expected per capita, based on their level of economic development alone, whereas 11 countries spend less than 50% their expected amount. Interpretation: Health spending remains disparate, with low-income and lower-middle-income countries increasing spending in absolute terms the least, and relying heavily on OOP spending and development assistance. Moreover, tremendous variation shows that neither time nor economic development guarantee adequate prepaid health resources, which are vital for the pursuit of universal health coverage. © The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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