Kenya Medical Research Institute -Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kilifi, Kenya.
BMC Public Health. 2012 Jan 10;12:20. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-20.
The 58th World Health Assembly called for all health systems to move towards universal coverage where everyone has access to key promotive, preventive, curative and rehabilitative health interventions at an affordable cost. Universal coverage involves ensuring that health care benefits are distributed on the basis of need for care and not on ability to pay. The distribution of health care benefits is therefore an important policy question, which health systems should address. The aim of this study is to assess the distribution of health care benefits in the Kenyan health system, compare changes over two time periods and demonstrate the extent to which the distribution meets the principles of universal coverage.
Two nationally representative cross-sectional households surveys conducted in 2003 and 2007 were the main sources of data. A comprehensive analysis of the entire health system is conducted including the public sector, private-not-for-profit and private-for-profit sectors. Standard benefit incidence analysis techniques were applied and adopted to allow application to private sector services.
The three sectors recorded similar levels of pro-rich distribution in 2003, but in 2007, the private-not-for-profit sector was pro-poor, public sector benefits showed an equal distribution, while the private-for-profit sector remained pro-rich. Larger pro-rich disparities were recorded for inpatient compared to outpatient benefits at the hospital level, but primary health care services were pro-poor. Benefits were distributed on the basis of ability to pay and not on need for care.
The principles of universal coverage require that all should benefit from health care according to need. The Kenyan health sector is clearly inequitable and benefits are not distributed on the basis of need. Deliberate efforts should be directed to restructuring the Kenyan health system to address access barriers and ensure that all Kenyans benefit from health care when they need it.
第 58 届世界卫生大会呼吁所有卫生系统向全民覆盖迈进,使每个人都能以负担得起的费用获得关键的促进、预防、治疗和康复性卫生干预措施。全民覆盖涉及确保根据对医疗保健的需求分配医疗保健福利,而不是根据支付能力分配。因此,医疗保健福利的分配是卫生系统应该解决的一个重要政策问题。本研究旨在评估肯尼亚卫生系统中的医疗保健福利分配情况,比较两个时期的变化,并展示分配情况在多大程度上符合全民覆盖的原则。
2003 年和 2007 年进行的两次全国代表性横断面家庭调查是主要数据来源。对包括公共部门、非营利私营部门和营利私营部门在内的整个卫生系统进行了全面分析。应用并采用了标准的受益情况分析技术,以允许适用于私营部门的服务。
2003 年,三个部门的分配情况均表现出明显的有利于富人的趋势,但到 2007 年,非营利私营部门转为有利于穷人,公共部门的福利分配均等,而营利私营部门仍有利于富人。与医院门诊相比,住院服务的贫富差距更大,但初级卫生保健服务有利于穷人。福利分配是基于支付能力,而不是基于对医疗保健的需求。
全民覆盖的原则要求所有人都应根据需要获得医疗保健。肯尼亚卫生部门明显不公平,福利不是根据需求分配的。应该有针对性地努力调整肯尼亚卫生系统,以解决获得卫生保健的障碍,确保所有肯尼亚人在需要时都能受益于卫生保健。