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Improving the Health of the World’s Poorest People

More than 1 billion people live on less than $1 per day. Health services and modern medicines are out of reach for them, leading to preventable deaths. This article explores the health disparities between poor and rich countries, as well as within countries, and provides approaches for improving the health of the poor.

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Improving the Health of the World’s Poorest People

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  1. Improving the Health of the World’s Poorest People

  2. Health and the World’s Poorest People • More than 1 billion people live on less than US$1 per day • Health services and modern medicines are out of reach • Millions of people die from preventable, curable diseases • Poverty is both a cause and an outcome of disease

  3. Health for All by the Year 2000? • WHO led a global Health for All effort in the 1970s • Representatives from 130 governments signed a declaration in 1978, agreeing that: • “Inequality in the health status of people, particularly between developed and developing countries as well as within countries, is politically, socially, and economically unacceptable.” • Despite this effort, disparities persist

  4. Poor-Rich Health Divide • Between Poor and Rich Countries • Within Countries • Explaining Health Disparities • Approaches for Improving the Health of the Poor

  5. Health Divide Between Poor and Rich Countries Years Notes: More developed regions, according to the UN Population Division, include Australia, New Zealand, Europe, North America, and Japan. Less developed regions include Africa, Asia (excluding Japan), and Latin America and the Caribbean; 49 countries within these regions are classified as least developed. Source: United Nations (UN) Population Division, World Population Prospects: The 2002 Revision—Highlights, accessed online at www.un.org/esa/population/publications/wpp2002/WPP2002-HIGHLIGHTSrev1.PDF on June 17, 2003.

  6. Health Divide Between Poor and Rich Countries • Poor countries assume heavier burden of disease • Developing countries disproportionately affected by many preventable and treatable diseases: HIV/AIDS, malaria, TB, malnutrition, maternal conditions, and childhood diseases (according to WHO)

  7. Health Spending Per Capita, by Country Income Level, 1997 Notes: As of 1998, other low-income countries are classified as having a per capita GNP less than US$760. Lower-middle-income countries are classified as having a per capita GNP between US$761 and US$3030. Upper-middle-income countries are classified as having a per capita GNP between US$3031 and US$9360. High-income countries are classified as having a per capita GNP greater than US$9360. Source: WHO, Macroeconomics and Health: Investing in Health for Economic Development (2001): 56.

  8. Poor-Rich Health Divide Within Countries • Health disparities are also immense within countries • Inequalities in health risk; care-seeking behavior, diagnosis, and treatment; and incidence of disease, disability, and death • Poor fare worse than others on various health outcomes, including childhood mortality and nutritional status

  9. Under-5 Mortality Rate (deaths per 1000 live births, by age 5) Source: D. Gwatkin et al., Initial Country-Level Information About Socioeconomic Differences in Health, Nutrition, and Population, Volumes I and II (November 2003).

  10. Women Receiving Delivery Assistance Percent Source: D. Gwatkin et al., Initial Country-Level Information About Socioeconomic Differences in Health, Nutrition, and Population, Volumes I and II (November 2003).

  11. Explaining Health Disparities • Household: financial resources, education, health services, and nutrition • Community: drinking water, housing, transportation, family size, and age at marriage • Health system: access, quality, and availability • Government: policies and public spending

  12. Share of Public Health Spending Received by Poor and Rich Percent Source: W.Hsiao and Y. Liu, “Health Care Financing: Assessing Its Relationship to Health Equity,” in Challenging Inequalities in Health: From Ethics to Action, ed. T Evans et al. (2001): 271.

  13. What can be done? Approaches for Benefiting the Poor • Socioeconomic approaches • Health-service approaches • Health-financing approaches • Approaches for measuring progress

  14. Socioeconomic Approaches • Policies that are pro-growth and pro-poor • Association of economic growth with inequality • Promotion of strong social policies for poor along with pro-growth policies • Investments in education • Safer jobs, higher health literacy, and preventive health care measures • Avoid risky behaviors, demand quality services

  15. Health-Service Approaches • Directing more health benefits toward the poor through “targeting” • Promoting primary and essential health care • Investing in primary care • Improving the quality of services

  16. Health-Service Approaches (Cont.) • Developing public-private partnerships to improve reach and responsiveness • Mobilizing community resources • Reorganizing health resources • Training community-based health workers • Involving traditional healers

  17. Health-Financing Approaches • Inequity in financing: poor are disadvantaged; pay out-of-pocket; face large, unanticipated costs; and lack cash reserves • Strategies for greater financial protection: risk-sharing or insurance plans, subsidized or free hospital care, and community financed health plans

  18. Approaches for Measuring Progress • Defining goals is challenging • Economic growth is associated with greater inequalities • Need to differentiate between absolute and relative success • Look beyond national averages to address disparities

  19. Conclusion • Over 1 billion people do not have access to basic health care • Growing inequalities are leaving the poor at a disadvantage • Need for comprehensive pro-poor approaches • Public health interventions must focus on the poor (not necessarily the majority)

  20. For More Information Dara Carr, “Improving the Health of the World’s Poorest People,” Health Bulletin 1 (Washington, DC: Population Reference Bureau, 2004). Available online at www.prb.org

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