Nigeria: UHC - Billions Left Behind As 96 Countries Remain Off-Track - WHO, World Bank

19 September 2023

A new report by the World Health Organisation, WHO, and the World Bank has revealed an alarming stagnation in the progress towards providing people everywhere with quality, affordable, and accessible healthcare, stating that billions of people have been left behind on the path to achieving Universal Health Coverage.

The 2023 Universal Health Coverage, UHC, Global Monitoring Report, was released ahead of the High-Level Meeting on UHC at the 78th United Nations General Assembly.

The report exposed a stark reality based on the latest available evidence, adding that more than half of the world's population is still not covered by essential health services.

The report also stated that 2 billion people face severe financial hardship when paying out-of-pocket for the services and products they need.

The WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said: "The COVID-19 pandemic was a reminder that healthy societies and economies depend on healthy people.

"The fact that so many people cannot benefit from affordable, quality, essential health services not only puts their own health at risk, it also puts the stability of communities, societies and economies at risk. We urgently need stronger political will, more aggressive investments in health, and a decisive shift to transform health systems based on primary health care."

The 2023 report further found that, over the past two decades, less than a third of countries have improved health service coverage and reduced catastrophic out-of-pocket health spending. It noted that 96 out of 138 countries for which data are available on both UHC dimensions are off-track in either service coverage, financial protection, or both.

Speaking, Vice President for Human Development, World Bank, Mamta Murthi said: "We know that achieving Universal Health Coverage is a critical step in helping people escape and stay out of poverty, yet there continues to be increased financial hardship, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable people.

"This report paints a dire picture, but also offers evidence on ways to prioritise health in government budgets and strengthen health systems for greater equity in both the delivery of essential quality health services and financial protection."

While health service coverage improved since the beginning of the century, progress has slowed since 2015, when the Sustainable Development Goals were adopted. Notably, there was no improvement from 2019 to 2021. While services for infectious diseases have seen significant gains since 2000, there has been little to no improvement in service coverage for noncommunicable diseases and reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health services in recent years. In 2021, about 4.5 billion people, more than half of the global population, were not fully covered by essential health services. This estimate does not yet reflect the potential long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The report noted that the catastrophic out-of-pocket health spending, defined as exceeding 10 per cent of a household budget, continues to rise.

"More than one billion people, about 14 per cent of the global population, experienced such large out-of-pocket payments relative to their budgets. But even small expenditures in absolute terms can be devastating for low-income families; approximately 1.3 billion individuals were pushed or further pushed into poverty by such payments, including 300 million people who were already living in extreme poverty.

"Out-of-pocket health payments can also cause individuals to forego essential care and force families to choose between paying for a visit to the doctor, buying food and water, or sending their children to school. Such trade-offs can spell the difference between the early treatment of a preventable disease and, at a later stage suffering severe illness or even death."

The report stated that addressing the problem requires progressive health financing policies that exempt those with limited ability to pay for health services.

To get back on track, the report states that achieving Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2030 was crucial for fulfilling the promise of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and realising the fundamental human right to health.

To reach the goal of UHC, substantial public sector investment and accelerated action by governments and development partners are essential. Key actions include a radical reorientation of health systems towards a primary healthcare approach, advancing equity in healthcare access and financial protection, and investing in robust health information systems.

These shifts are essential to counter the impact of COVID-19 on health systems and the health workforce globally, as well as the new challenges posed by macroeconomic, climate, demographic, and political trends that threaten hard-won health gains worldwide.

The 2023 UHC Global Monitoring Report serves as a wake-up call to the global community, highlighting the urgent need to prioritise and invest in UHC to ensure that everyone gains access to quality, affordable, and accessible healthcare without suffering financial hardship.

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