17/07/2017 BY CATHERINE SAEZ,
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY WATCH LEAVE A COMMENT
A
new study by the World Health Organization finds that most countries will have
the technological and the financial ability to reach universal health coverage
in the next 13 years, according to authors.
The document [pdf],
published today in The Lancet, estimates that “an additional $274
billion spending on health is needed per year by 2030 to make progress” towards
Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3 (Ensure healthy lives and promote
well-being for all at all ages).
The
study, titled, “Financing transformative health systems towards achievement of
the health Sustainable Development Goals: a model for projected resource needs
in 67 low-income and middle-income countries,” is nicknamed the ‘SDG Health
Price Tag’ by the WHO.
The
number of US$274 billion a year is described as a “progress scenario,” while an
“ambitious” scenario in which health system targets are reached would cost
US$371 billion, according to the study. That ambitious scenario would save some
97 million lives and significantly increase life expectancy, it says.
Agnès
Soucat, one of the co-authors of the study, said during a virtual press
briefing today that the paper “gives us hope” that most countries can finance
health services for all by 2030. Only a handful of very low income countries
will still need development assistance for health.
It
is a very hopeful message, she said, to see that by 2030, most countries will
be able both technically and financially to reach universal health coverage and
SDG3.
According
to the study, all countries “will need to strengthen investments in health
systems to expand service provision in order to reach SDG 3 health targets, but
even the poorest can reach some level of universality.”
WHO
Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in a separate article published
in The Lancet today titled “All roads lead to universal health
coverage,” said, “I know from personal experience that it is possible for all
countries to achieve universal health coverage, including key public health interventions.”
“Universal
health coverage is ultimately a political choice. It is the responsibility of
every country and national government to pursue it,” he added.
According
to a WHO press release,
“The SDG Health Price Tag does not prescribe what countries should spend on
health, but is intended as a tool to inform further research. It also
highlights that achieving universal health coverage and the other health targets
requires not only funding but political will and respect for human rights.”
WHO
plans to update the estimates every five years and will include other
health-related targets and diseases as more evidence becomes available, the
release said.
https://www.ip-watch.org/2017/07/17/study-countries-ability-reach-universal-health-coverage-2030/?utm_campaign=KFF-2017-Daily-GHP-Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=54361709&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--9xXhpbYPXEoc9hoIDJE4a8H31AQsHnsqNMrWu3jZy-_RhSXnFf-fLa24yeKibIq6Jy1_lHfHJoaC6dyJIVxa5Zbl7rw&_hsmi=54361709
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