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    Health financing policies during the COVID-19 pandemic and implications for universal health care: a case study of 15 countries

    Foo, Chuan De
    Verma, Monica
    Tan, Si Ying
    Hamer, Jess
    Mark, Nina van der
    Pholpark, Aungsumalee
    Hanvoravongchai, Piya
    Cheh, Paul Li Jen
    Marthias, Tiara
    Mahendradhata, Yodi
    Putri, Likke Prawidya
    Hafidz, Firdaus
    Giang, Kim Bao
    Khuc, Thi Hong Hanh
    Minh, Hoang Van
    Wu, Shishi
    Caamal-Olvera, Cinthya G
    Orive, Gorka
    Wang, Hong
    Nachuk, Stefan
    Lim, Jeremy
    Cruz, Valeria de Oliveira
    Yates, Rob
    Legido-Quigley, Helena
    2023-12

    Background: The COVID-19 pandemic was a health emergency requiring rapid fiscal resource mobilisation to support national responses. The use of effective health financing mechanisms and policies, or lack thereof, affected the impact of the pandemic on the population, particularly vulnerable groups and individuals. We provide an overview and illustrative examples of health financing policies adopted in 15 countries during the pandemic, develop a framework for resilient health financing, and use this pandemic to argue a case to move towards universal health coverage (UHC). Methods: In this case study, we examined the national health financing policy responses of 15 countries, which were purposefully selected countries to represent all WHO regions and have a range of income levels, UHC index scores, and health system typologies. We did a systematic literature review of peer-reviewed articles, policy documents, technical reports, and publicly available data on policy measures undertaken in response to the pandemic and complemented the data obtained with 61 in-depth interviews with health systems and health financing experts. We did a thematic analysis of our data and organised key themes into a conceptual framework for resilient health financing. Findings: Resilient health financing for health emergencies is characterised by two main phases: (1) absorb and recover, where health systems are required to absorb the initial and subsequent shocks brought about by the pandemic and restabilise from them; and (2) sustain, where health systems need to expand and maintain fiscal space for health to move towards UHC while building on resilient health financing structures that can better prepare health systems for future health emergencies. We observed that five key financing policies were implemented across the countries—namely, use of extra-budgetary funds for a swift initial response, repurposing of existing funds, efficient fund disbursement mechanisms to ensure rapid channelisation to the intended personnel and general population, mobilisation of the private sector to mitigate the gaps in public settings, and expansion of service coverage to enhance the protection of vulnerable groups. Accountability and monitoring are needed at every stage to ensure efficient and accountable movement and use of funds, which can be achieved through strong governance and coordination, information technology, and community engagement. Interpretation: Our findings suggest that health systems need to leverage the COVID-19 pandemic as a window of opportunity to make health financing policies robust and need to politically commit to public financing mechanisms that work to prepare for future emergencies and as a lever for UHC. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    health financing
    universal health coverage
    Journal article
    Text
    application/pdf
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0).
    Open access
    Copyright (c) 2023 Foo et al.
    https://resources.equityinitiative.org/handle/ei/640
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    Health financing policies during the COVID-19 pandemic and implications for universal health care a case study of 15 countries.pdf

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    • Jeremy Lim [6]
    • Tiara Marthias [10]

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