Health systems financing: the path to universal coverage
Figures, tables and images
Figures
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Coverage of births attended by skilled health personnel and diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP3) vaccination by country, latest available year
pdf, 468kb -
Three dimensions to consider when moving towards universal coverage
pdf, 450kb -
Government expenditure on health as a percentage of total government expenditures by WHO region, 2000-2007
pdf, 462kb -
The share of total government expenditure allocated to health in the WHO European Region, 2007
pdf, 474kb -
Development assistance for health per capita by country income level, low- and middle-income countries, 2007
pdf, 479kb -
Out-of-pocket payments as a function of gross domestic product (GOP) per capita, 2007
pdf, 486kb -
The effect of out-of-pocket spending on financial catastrophe and impoverishment
pdf, 471kb -
Direct payments made at public and private facilities in 39 countries
pdf, 475kb -
Percentage of births attended by skilled health personnel by level of total health spending, low- and middle-income countries, latest available year (each point represents a country)
pdf, 475kb -
Median price ratios of public-sector procurement prices for generic medicines, by WHO region
pdf, 477kb -
The health-financing decision process
pdf, 482kb
Tables
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Domestic options for innovative financing
pdf, 678kb -
Ten leading sources of inefficiency
pdf, 677kb -
Potential gains from critically assessing interventions
pdf, 676kb -
Potential efficiency savings by cost and country-income category
pdf, 674kb -
Technical decisions required for Action 5
pdf, 672kb -
Monitoring universal coverage of protection from financial risk
pdf, 668kb
Images
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image 1
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Caption: Brazil is one of many low and middle-income countries that have adjusted financing systems so more people can access health services (Emergency Unit, Manguinhos, Brazil.).
Credit: WHO Bulletin/Claudia Jurberg -
image 2
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Caption: Medicines account for 20-30% of global health spending. (Hospital Regional Chiapas, Mexico).
Credit: WHO/PAHO -
image 3
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Caption: This mother was able to give birth with help from a skilled healthworker: millions of others are unable to because they cannot afford the fees. (Ndosho maternity clinic, Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo).
Credit: WHO/Christopher Black -
image 4
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Caption: If all donor countries started to keep their development assistance promises, more than 3 million lives could be saved by 2015 (Char Qala Waziribad Comprehensive Health Clinic (CHC) Kabul, Afghanistan. 18 April 2010).
Credit: WHO/Christopher Black -
image 5
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Caption: Kyrgyzstan has recently gone a long way to increase health coverage by changing its health financing mechanisms (the Kirov Primary Health Care Centre in Uzgen, Kyrgyzstan).
Credit: WHO/EURO/Igor Sapozhnikov -
image 6
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Caption: Beneficiaries show their health insurance cards in Kwara State, Nigeria.
Credit: WHO Bulletin/Pharmaccess -
image 7
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Caption: Strengthening health financing is critical if all women are to be able to deliver their babies safely (Khovd aimag, Mongolia).
Credit: UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe -
image 8
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Caption: Ensuring the right mix between prevention, promotion and treatment will ensure more health for the money (Alwar, Haryana state, India).
Credit: WHO/Christopher Black -
image 9
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Caption: France saved almost US$2 billion in 2008 by using generic drugs wherever possible.
Credit: WHO/Christopher Black