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Chapter 15 - Universal Health Coverage and Beyond

Health System Interventions and Intersectoral Policies

from Section 2 - Transforming Health Systems: Confronting Challenges, Seizing Opportunities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 December 2022

Sameen Siddiqi
Affiliation:
Aga Khan University
Awad Mataria
Affiliation:
World Health Organization, Egypt
Katherine D. Rouleau
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
Meesha Iqbal
Affiliation:
UTHealth School of Public Health, Houston
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Summary

Health systems around the world share common goals, but attainment is widely variable. Universal Health Coverage (UHC) has emerged as a consolidated response to bridge the gap between what a health system should be doing and what it does. Drawing from global best evidence, this chapter explores how countries in practice could translate and achieve UHC, focusing on two central questions: What services and policies should be covered and be implemented; and second, how can health financing meet the UHC requirements? These include both health sector as well as intersectoral policies and interventions prioritized in the DCP3 package. The health sector interventions are distributed across four clusters – age-related, non-communicable disease and injury, Infectious diseases, and health services. The intersectoral interventions and policies fall under four domains – fiscal, regulatory, information and education, and built environment. The second question looks at the key challenges of country-level implementation capacity. It concludes by drawing out generalizable themes of country responses to the UHC Sustainable Development Goal targets to inform the way forward.

Type
Chapter
Information
Making Health Systems Work in Low and Middle Income Countries
Textbook for Public Health Practitioners
, pp. 225 - 240
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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