Protecting pro-poor health services during financial crises: lessons from experience.

Pablo Gottret, Vaibhav Gupta, Susan Sparkes, Ajay Tandon, Valerie Moran, Peter Berman
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Abstract

Objective: This chapter assesses the extent to which previous economic and financial crises had a negative impact on health outcomes and health financing. In addition, we review evidence related to the effectiveness of different policy measures undertaken in past crises to protect access to health services, especially for the poor and vulnerable. The current global crisis is unique both in terms of its scale and origins. Unlike most previous instances, the current crisis has its origins in developed countries, initially the United States, before it spread to middle- and lower-income countries. The current crisis is now affecting almost all countries at all levels of income. This chapter addresses several key questions aimed at helping inform possible policy responses to the current crisis from the perspective of the health sector: What is the nature of the current crisis and in what ways does it differ from previous experiences? What are some of the key. lessons from previous crises? How have governments responded previously to protect health from such macroeconomic shocks? How can we improve the likelihood of positive action today?

Methodology/approach: The chapter reviews the literature on the impact of financial crises on health outcomes and health expenditures and on the effectiveness of past policy efforts to protect human development during periods of economic downturn. It also presents analysis of household surveys and health expenditure data to track health seeking behavior and out-of-pocket expenditures by households during times of financial crisis.

Findings: Evidence from previous crises indicates that health-related impacts during economic downturns can occur through various channels. The impact in households experiencing reductions in employment and income could be manifest in terms of poorer nutritional outcomes and lower levels of utilization of health care when needed. Households may become impoverished, reduce needed health services, and experience reductions in consumption as a result of health shocks occurring during a time when their economic vulnerability has increased. Women, children, the poor, and informal sector workers are likely to be most at risk of experiencing negative health-related consequences in a crisis. Real government spending per capita on health care could decline due to reduced revenues, currency devaluations, and potential reductions in external aid flows. Low-income countries with weak fiscal positions are likely to be the most vulnerable.

Implications for policy: Past crises can inform policy-making aimed at protecting health outcomes and reducing financial risk from health shocks. Evidence from previous crises indicates that broad-brush strategies that maintained overall levels of government health spending tended not to be successful, failing to protect access to quality health services especially for the poor. It is particularly vital to ensure access to essential health commodities, which in many low-income countries are imported, in the face of weakening exchange rates. Focused efforts to sustain the supply of lower-level basic services, combined with targeted demand-side approaches like conditional cash transfers may be more effective than broader sectoral approaches. Low-income countries may need specific short-term measures to ensure that health outcomes do not suffer.

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在金融危机期间保护有利于穷人的卫生服务:经验教训。
目的:本章评估以往经济和金融危机对卫生成果和卫生筹资的负面影响程度。此外,我们审查了与过去危机中为保护特别是穷人和弱势群体获得保健服务而采取的不同政策措施的有效性有关的证据。当前的全球危机在规模和根源上都是独一无二的。与以往的大多数情况不同,当前的危机起源于发达国家,首先是美国,然后蔓延到中低收入国家。目前的危机正在影响几乎所有收入水平的所有国家。本章讨论了几个关键问题,旨在从卫生部门的角度为应对当前危机的可能政策提供信息:当前危机的性质是什么?它与以往的经验有何不同?什么是一些关键。从以往的危机中吸取教训?政府以前是如何应对这种宏观经济冲击的?我们怎样才能提高今天采取积极行动的可能性呢?方法/方法:本章审查了关于金融危机对卫生成果和卫生支出的影响以及关于过去在经济衰退期间保护人类发展的政策努力的有效性的文献。它还提供了对家庭调查和卫生支出数据的分析,以跟踪金融危机期间家庭的求医行为和自付支出。研究结果:以往危机的证据表明,经济衰退期间与健康相关的影响可以通过各种渠道发生。就业和收入减少对家庭的影响可能表现为营养状况较差,必要时利用保健的水平较低。家庭可能变得贫困,所需的保健服务减少,消费减少,这是在其经济脆弱性增加的时候发生的健康冲击的结果。妇女、儿童、穷人和非正规部门工人最有可能在危机中遭受与健康有关的负面后果。由于收入减少、货币贬值和外部援助流量可能减少,政府在卫生保健方面的实际人均支出可能下降。财政状况不佳的低收入国家可能是最脆弱的。对政策的影响:过去的危机可以为旨在保护健康成果和减少健康冲击带来的财务风险的决策提供信息。以往危机的证据表明,维持政府卫生支出总体水平的粗放战略往往不会成功,无法保护特别是穷人获得高质量卫生服务的机会。尤其重要的是,在汇率不断走弱的情况下,确保获得基本保健商品,而在许多低收入国家,这些商品是进口的。集中努力维持较低层次基本服务的供应,加上有条件现金转移等有针对性的需求方办法,可能比更广泛的部门办法更有效。低收入国家可能需要采取具体的短期措施,以确保健康结果不受影响。
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