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Journal ArticleDOI

National health accounts in developing countries: appropriate methods and recent applications.

Peter Berman
- 01 Jan 1997 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 1, pp 11-30
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TLDR
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.
Abstract
Better information on the financing of the health sector is an essential basis for wise policy change in the area of health sector reform. Analysis of health care financing should begin with sound estimates of national health expenditure--total spending, the contributions to spending from different sources and the claims on spending by different uses of the funds. The member countries of the OECD have successfully established such comparative health expenditure accounts in terms of standardized definitions of the uses of funds and breakdowns by public and private sector sources. This has resulted in important research on health system differences which could explain variations in the level and composition of financing. The United States has developed a more detailed approach called National Health Accounts, which expands the OECD method into a more disaggregated 'sources and uses' matrix. In the developing countries, analysis of health expenditures has been much less systematic, despite several decades of calls by international researchers for more attention. 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. Because most developing countries have more pluralistic health financing structures than are found in most industrialized countries, an enhanced and adapted version of the 'sources and uses' matrix method is proposed. This method should be modified to address the relevant categories of expenditures prevalent in the developing countries. Examples of recent applications of such 'national health accounts' from the Philippines, Egypt, India, Mexico, Colombia and Zambia are presented. Experience to date suggests that development of sound estimates using this method in low and middle income countries is feasible and affordable. National health accounts estimates can significantly influence policy. They provide decision makers with a holistic picture of the health sector, showing the actual emphasis of spending and the roles of different payers. They also provide a consistent framework for modelling reforms and for monitoring the effects of changes in financing and provision. An easy to use software tool has been developed for training and data management. Regional networks of collaborating national groups are proposed as a first step in expanding use of the method and to gain both national and cross-national comparative benefits.

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Citations
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Household health expenditures in Nepal: implications for health care financing reform.

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Estimation of the determinants of household health care expenditures in Nepal with controls for endogenous illness and provider choice.

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References
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Book

Financing Health Services in Developing Countries: An Agenda for Reform

TL;DR: 4 policies for health financing are proposed to raise revenues for important health programs increase the efficiency of public health services and make the system better serve the poor.
Journal Article

National health expenditures: a global analysis.

TL;DR: An effort was made to estimate public, private and total expenditures on health for all countries of the world, and regressions were used to predict the missing values of regional and global estimates.
Book

Public Expenditure in Malaysia: Who Benefits and Why

TL;DR: In this paper, the distributive effects of public expenditures in Malaysia were investigated, focusing on public spending for education, medical care, public utilities, and agriculture, and two sets of data were developed: information on the costs of government output in each of several major programs and a sample survey of use of these services by household.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reforming health care in seven European nations.

Jeremy Hurst
- 01 Aug 1991 - 
TL;DR: In this essay, Jeremy Hurst provides a glimpse of the nature of change in the 1980s in seven West European nations, all of which have pretty much stabilized the growth of their health care spending to a level that is commensurate with therowth of their national economies.
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