Micah Angela E, Chen Catherine S, Zlavog Bianca S, Hashimi Golsum, Chapin Abigail, Dieleman Joseph L
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
BMJ Glob Health. 2019 Jan 13;4(1):e001159. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001159. eCollection 2019.
Government health spending is a primary source of funding in the health sector across the world. However, in sub-Saharan Africa, only about a third of all health spending is sourced from the government. The objectives of this study are to describe the growth in government health spending, examine its determinants and explain the variation in government health spending across sub-Saharan African countries.
We used panel data on domestic government health spending in 46 countries in sub-Saharan Africa from 1995 to 2015 from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. A regression model was used to examine the factors associated with government health spending, and Shapley decomposition was used to attribute the contributions of factors to the explained variance in government health spending.
While the growth rate in government health spending in sub-Saharan Africa has been positive overall, there are variations across subgroups. Between 1995 and 2015, government health spending in West Africa grew by 6.7% (95% uncertainty intervals [UI]: 6.2% to 7.0%) each year, whereas in Southern Africa it grew by only 4.5% (UI: 4.5% to 4.5%) each year. Furthermore, per-person government health spending ranged from $651 (Namibia) in 2017 purchasing power parity dollars to $4 (Central African Republic) in 2015. Good governance, national income and the share of it that is government spending were positively associated with government health spending. The results from the decomposition, however, showed that individual country characteristics made up the highest percentage of the explained variation in government health spending across sub-Saharan African countries.
These findings highlight that a country's policy choices are important for how much the health sector receives. As the attention of the global health community focuses on ways to stimulate domestic government health spending, an understanding that individual country sociopolitical context is an important driver for success will be key.
政府卫生支出是全球卫生部门的主要资金来源。然而,在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,所有卫生支出中只有约三分之一来自政府。本研究的目的是描述政府卫生支出的增长情况,研究其决定因素,并解释撒哈拉以南非洲国家政府卫生支出的差异。
我们使用了健康指标与评估研究所提供的1995年至2015年撒哈拉以南非洲46个国家国内政府卫生支出的面板数据。采用回归模型研究与政府卫生支出相关的因素,并使用夏普利分解法将各因素的贡献归因于政府卫生支出的解释方差。
虽然撒哈拉以南非洲地区政府卫生支出的增长率总体呈正向,但各亚组之间存在差异。1995年至2015年期间,西非的政府卫生支出每年增长6.7%(95%不确定区间[UI]:6.2%至7.0%),而南部非洲每年仅增长4.5%(UI:4.5%至4.5%)。此外,人均政府卫生支出从2017年购买力平价美元的651美元(纳米比亚)到2015年的4美元(中非共和国)不等。善治、国民收入及其作为政府支出的份额与政府卫生支出呈正相关。然而,分解结果表明,在撒哈拉以南非洲国家政府卫生支出的解释差异中,个别国家特征所占比例最高。
这些发现突出表明,一个国家的政策选择对于卫生部门获得的资金数额至关重要。随着全球卫生界的注意力集中在刺激国内政府卫生支出的方法上,认识到个别国家的社会政治背景是成功的重要驱动因素将是关键。