Make universal health coverage a reality: WHO

  • Enhancing health coverage will help reduce maternal, newborn and child deaths

Kathmandu, March 30

An estimated 130 million people in WHO South-East Asia Region lack access to essential health services and over 50 million people are pushed into poverty every year because of health care costs.

Countries, including Nepal, need to take urgent and concerted efforts to make universal health coverage a reality and thereby promote wellbeing for all at all ages, said the World Health Organisation Regional Office for South-East Asia.

“Universal health coverage means that all people, however rich or poor, and wherever they live, are able to access the health care they need without incurring financial hardship. We must make UHC a reality and ensure that no one is left behind,” Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, regional director, WHO South-East Asia,  said at the beginning of a three-day meeting on ‘Health, the SDGs and the role of Universal Health Coverage’ organsed in New Delhi today.

At the meeting, health ministers and experts from across the region are discussing ways to accelerate health coverage and attain the Sustainable Development Goal of ensuring healthy lives and promoting wellbeing for all at all ages.

Dr Khetrapal Singh emphasised four ways that countries can increase health coverage and progress in their journey toward achieving UHC.

“First, access to quality frontline health care is essential. Quality frontline services enhance equity. Second, a well-trained, highly motivated health workforce must be created,” she said.

“Third, we must reduce out-of-pocket payments. At present out-of-pocket expenditures in the region account for as much as 70  per cent of all health care spending. This represents a tremendous financial burden for individuals and their families. For many of the poorest it means health care is simply inaccessible.”

“And fourth, countries must monitor who is not getting access to care and who is being impoverished as a result of health care costs. Enhancing coverage requires reliable information and an in-depth understanding of such gaps and challenges,” she added.

According to WHO, universal health coverage underpins the other SDG health targets and is the means by which they can be attained. Enhancing coverage will help reduce maternal, newborn and child deaths; help end the epidemics of AIDS, TB and malaria as well as hepatitis and other communicable diseases; and enhance access to sexual and reproductive health care services.

It will also help tackle new areas of focus in the region, including alarming rises in non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and hypertension.