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Benchmarks for health expenditures, services and outcomes in Africa during the 1990s

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TLDR
There is wide variation in scale and outcome of health care spending between African countries, with poorer countries tending to do worse than wealthier ones, and the data are useful for providing benchmarks for performance and for crudely identifying problems in health systems for individual countries.
Abstract
There is limited information on national health expenditures, services, and outcomes in African countries during the 1990s. We intend to make statistical information available for national level comparisons. National level data were collected from numerous international databases, and supplemented by national household surveys and World Bank expenditure reviews. The results were tabulated and analysed in an exploratory fashion to provide benchmarks for groupings of African countries and individual country comparison. There is wide variation in scale and outcome of health care spending between African countries, with poorer countries tending to do worse than wealthier ones. From 1990-96, the median annual per capita government expenditure on health was nearly US$ 6, but averaged US$ 3 in the lowest-income countries, compared to US$ 72 in middle-income countries. Similar trends were found for health services and outcomes. Results from individual countries (particularly Ethiopia, Ghana, Cote d'Ivoire and Gabon) are used to indicate how the data can be used to identify areas of improvement in health system performance. Serious gaps in data, particularly concerning private sector delivery and financing, health service utilization, equity and efficiency measures, hinder more effective health management. Nonetheless, the data are useful for providing benchmarks for performance and for crudely identifying problem areas in health systems for individual countries.

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References
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World development report 1993 : investing in health

TL;DR: This report examines the controversial questions surrounding health care and health policy and advocates a threefold approach to health policy for governments in developing countries and in the formerly socialist countries, based in large part on innovative research.
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Public social spending in Africa : do the poor benefit?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effectiveness of public social spending on education and health care in several African countries and found that these programs favor not the poor, but those who are better-off.
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Better Health in Africa: Experience and Lessons Learned

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TL;DR: It is argued that despite existing resource constraints it is possible to make immense improvements in health care in sub-Saharan Africa at a cost of approximately $13/person.
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National health accounts in developing countries: appropriate methods and recent applications.

TL;DR: This paper reviews previous work done in developing countries and proposes renewed attention to national health expenditures, adapting the recent experience of the United States and an enhanced and adapted version of the 'sources and uses' matrix method is proposed.
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Health Expenditures, Services, and Outcomes in Africa: Basic Data and Cross-National Comparisons, 1990-1996

TL;DR: A growing differentiation in African country health sector expenditures is identified and a reversal in adult mortality trends from 1990 to 1995 is flagged, with small increases for both males and females.
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