Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L3 5QA, UK.
Department of Learning, Informatics, Management and Ethics, Karolinska Institutet, Solna Campus, 171 77, Stockholm, Sweden.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2019 Jun;17(3):399-410. doi: 10.1007/s40258-019-00464-9.
Health and wellbeing as one of the Sustainable Development Goals requires all countries to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC). That is, all people must have access to healthcare when needed at an affordable price. While several indices were developed recently to assess UHC status, these indices appeared to be difficult for practitioners to apply without statistical knowledge.
This paper presents a transparent and step-by-step practical calculation method of such an index using Excel spreadsheets, applied to some Asian and African countries. We also decompose the contribution of socioeconomic groups to UHC index values.
We utilized the well known UHC illustration (three-dimensional box, showing population coverage, service coverage and financial protection) to calculate the UHC index. We also broke down the index into socioeconomic groups. For validation, correlation coefficients between our index and other UHC indices were calculated and the relationship of our index with out-of-pocket (OOP) payments was estimated.
World Bank data from six Asian and 15 African countries on health-service coverage of people in five socioeconomic quintiles with financial protection were used to calculate our UHC index. Among the Asian countries, indices ranged between 26.0% (Nepal) and 58.7% (Kazakhstan), while in African countries indices ranged between 8.9% (Chad) and 55.3% (Namibia). Decomposition of the UHC index showed a higher contribution to the index by richer socioeconomic groups. The correlation coefficients between our estimated UHC index values and those of others ranged between 0.774 and 0.900. Our index reduced by 1.4% in response to a 1% increase in OOP payments.
This spreadsheet approach for calculating the UHC index appeared to be useful, where the interrelation of UHC dimensions was easily observed. Decomposition of the index could be useful for policy-makers to identify the subpopulations and health services with need for further interventions towards UHC achievement.
健康与福祉是可持续发展目标之一,要求所有国家实现全民健康覆盖(UHC)。也就是说,所有的人都必须能够在负担得起的价格下获得所需的医疗保健。尽管最近已经开发了几个评估 UHC 状况的指数,但这些指数似乎没有统计学知识的从业者难以应用。
本文提出了一种使用 Excel 电子表格的透明且逐步的实用计算方法,应用于一些亚洲和非洲国家。我们还分解了社会经济群体对 UHC 指数值的贡献。
我们利用众所周知的 UHC 图示(三维框,显示人口覆盖率、服务覆盖率和财务保护)来计算 UHC 指数。我们还将指数分解为社会经济群体。为了验证,我们计算了我们的指数与其他 UHC 指数之间的相关系数,并估计了我们的指数与自付费用(OOP)之间的关系。
使用世界银行来自六个亚洲和 15 个非洲国家的数据,这些数据涵盖了五个社会经济五分位数的人群在五个社会经济五分位数的人群中的卫生服务覆盖范围和财务保护情况,用于计算我们的 UHC 指数。在亚洲国家中,指数范围在 26.0%(尼泊尔)至 58.7%(哈萨克斯坦)之间,而在非洲国家中,指数范围在 8.9%(乍得)至 55.3%(纳米比亚)之间。UHC 指数的分解表明,较富裕的社会经济群体对指数的贡献更大。我们估计的 UHC 指数值与其他指数之间的相关系数范围在 0.774 至 0.900 之间。OOP 支付增加 1%,我们的指数减少 1.4%。
这种用于计算 UHC 指数的电子表格方法似乎很有用,其中 UHC 维度的相互关系很容易观察到。指数的分解对于政策制定者来说可能很有用,可以确定需要进一步干预以实现 UHC 的亚人群和卫生服务。