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2013, Current Topics in Public Health
AI
This chapter discusses the financing of public health systems, emphasizing the interplay between public and private funding. It explores various economic theories related to health services consumption and resource optimization, highlighting the need for informed policy-making based on economic principles. The chapter concludes that effective public health financing requires a nuanced understanding of both economic factors and local contexts, advocating for refined data collection to better inform resource allocation and health outcomes.
2001
The Partnerships for Health Reform (PHR) Project seeks to improve people’s health in low- and middle-income countries by supporting health sector reforms that ensure equitable access to efficient, sustainable, quality health care services. In partnership with local stakeholders, PHR promotes an integrated approach to health reform and builds capacity in the following key areas:> better informed and more participatory policy processes in health sector reform;> more equitable and sustainable health financing systems;> improved incentives within health systems to encourage agents to use and deliver efficient and quality health services; and> enhanced organization and management of health care systems and institutions to support specific health sector reforms. PHR advances knowledge and methodologies to develop, implement, and monitor health reforms and their impact, and promotes the exchange of information on critical health reform issues.
Health Affairs, 2006
The recent emphasis on preparedness has created heightened expectations and has raised questions about the extent to which U.S. public health systems have evolved in recent years. This paper describes how public health preparedness is transforming public health agencies. Key signs of change include new partnerships, changes in the workforce, new technologies, and evolving organizational structures. Each of these elements has had some positive impact on public health; however, integration of preparedness with other public health functions remains challenging. The preparedness mission has also raised challenges in the areas of leadership, governance, quality, and accountability. [Health Affairs 25, no. 4 (2006): 935-945; 10.1377/hlthaff.25.4.935]
Investments in public health preparedness can mitigate the human and economic costs of disease outbreaks. Preparedness is an iterative process of quality improvement through which public health seeks to optimise the anticipation of, response to, and recovery from health threats. Integrating preparedness processes into routine public health activities is essential to ensure the sustainability of preparedness measures. Developing means to efficiently prepare for a wide range of health threats and to coordinate across sectors and national borders will be important priorities in the coming years.
Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, 2024
Objectives: Italy often experiences major events, such as earthquakes, floods, and migrant shipwrecks. Current and future global challenges for health workers are made up by climate change, pandemics, and wars. In this work, we will assess the state-of-art of training and interest towards these challenges among Italian post-degree public health schools. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in Italy in June 2023 among Italian public health residents. The study investigated training levels and updates regarding emergencies in Italian residencies. It also analyzed interest and importance of topic, impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and sources of information. Results: Of 289 respondents, 86.2% deemed the topic important and 74.4% expressed interest. 90.1% pointed out the lack of dedicated courses and 93.1% of specialized master’s programs. Perceived importanceinthetopicwasassociatedwiththedesiretoattenddedicatedconferences. As for COVID-19, 24.6% recognized the importance of this topic pre-pandemic, while 50.9% raised awareness during the pandemic. Conclusions: ThissurveyshowstheneedfortheofferofemergencytrainingprogramsinItalian public health schools. Professionals in public health can make a great contribution to emergen cies, not only in preparedness, but also in response and recovery phases.
Background The amount of resources, particularly prepaid resources, available for health can affect access to health care and health outcomes. Although health spending tends to increase with economic development, tremendous variation exists among health financing systems. Estimates of future spending can be beneficial for policy makers and planners, and can identify financing gaps. In this study, we estimate future gross domestic product (GDP), all-sector government spending, and health spending disaggregated by source, and we compare expected future spending to potential future spending.
PubMed, 1992
Although the American public health system has made major contributions to life expectancy for residents of this country over the past century, the system now faces more complex health problems that require comprehensive approaches and increased capacity, particularly in local and State public health agencies. To strengthen the public health system, concerted action is needed to meet these five critical needs: First, the knowledge base of public health workers needs to be supplemented through on-the-job training and continuing education programs. To this end, self-study courses will be expanded, and a network of regional training centers will be established throughout the country. Second, communities need dynamic leadership from public health officials and their agencies. To enhance leadership skills and expand the leadership role of public health agencies, focused personal leadership development activities, including a Public Health Leadership Institute, and national conferences will provide a vision of the future role of public health agencies. Third, local and State public health agencies need access to data on the current health status of the people in their communities and guidance from the nation's public health experts. To improve access to information resources, state-of-the-art technologies will be deployed to create integrated information and communication systems linking all components of the public health system. Fourth, local and State agencies need disease prevention and health promotion plans that target problems and develop strategies and the capacity to address them. To provide communities with structured approaches to this process, planning tools have been developed and distributed, and technical assistance will be provided to local and State health agencies to involve each community in planning,priority setting, and constituency building.Finally, public health agencies need adequate resources to fund prevention programs. To improve the use of existing Federal support and enhance the availability of new community resources, grant programs will be modified, and innovative approaches to local resource enhancement will be developed and shared.Activities in these five key areas are designed to improve the infrastructure of the public health system and its capacity to carry out effectively the core functions of public health assessment, policy development, and assurance of the availability of the benefits of public health. If the nation is to achieve the health objectives for the year 2000, the public health system-the individuals and institutions that, when working effectively together, promote and protect the health of the people-must be strengthened.
The Lancet, 2019
Background Comprehensive and comparable estimates of health spending in each country are a key input for health policy and planning, and are necessary to support the achievement of national and international health goals. Previous studies have tracked past and projected future health spending until 2040 and shown that, with economic development, countries tend to spend more on health per capita, with a decreasing share of spending from development assistance and out-of-pocket sources. We aimed to characterise the past, present, and predicted future of global health spending, with an emphasis on equity in spending across countries.
2020
Maternal healthcare financing is key to the smooth functioning of maternal health systems in a country. In India, maternal healthcare persists as a significant public health issue. Adequate health insurance could transform the utilization of maternal health care services to prevent maternal consequences. This paper aims to examine the health insurance policies that cover maternal health and their performance in India. The unit-level social consumption data on health by the National Sample Survey Organizations (NSSO), conducted in India (2017-18), is used. Bi-variate analysis, logistic regression, and propensity scoring matching (PSM) are used to evaluate the coverage of health insurance coverage on women’s maternal health care utilization. Our findings suggest that spending on health insurance can benefit pregnant women, especially among the poor, without financial stress. The study has also minimized the financial burden and prevent high-risk pregnancy-related complications and con...
Scandinavian journal of public health. Supplement, 2006
The British Medical Journal, 2017
The article examines how the World Bank is trying to improve global financing for health pandemics. It takes a closer look at the "Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility" (PEF)
BMJ Global Health, 2021
2004
Is California's public health system prepared for a bioterrorist attack? Or a deadly new infectious disease such as SARS? A RAND Corporation team found that even in California—widely regarded as one of the best-prepared states—the level of preparedness ranged from excellent to poor. Californians' level of public health protection depends on the public health jurisdiction in which they happen to live.
Health economics, policy, and law, 2017
The articles in this special issue have demonstrated how unprecedented transitions have come with both challenges and opportunities for health financing. Against the background of these challenges and opportunities, the Working Group on Health Financing at the Chatham House Centre on Global Health Security laid out, in 2014, a set of policy responses encapsulated in 20 recommendations for how to make progress towards a coherent global framework for health financing. These recommendations pertain to domestic financing of national health systems, global public goods for health, external financing for national health systems and the cross-cutting issues of accountability and agreement on a new global framework. Since the Working Group concluded its work, multiple events have reinforced the group's recommendations. Among these are the agreement on the Addis Ababa Action Agenda, the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals, the outbreak of Ebola in West Africa and the release of...
Health Systems & Reform, 2018
European Journal of Public Health, 2016
2005
Partners for Health Reformplus is USAID's flagship project for health policy and health system strengthening in developing and transitional countries. The five-year project (2000)(2001)(2002)(2003)(2004)(2005) builds on the predecessor Partnerships for Health Reform Project, continuing PHR's focus on health policy, financing, and organization, with new emphasis on community participation, infectious disease surveillance, and information systems that support the management and delivery of appropriate health services. PHRplus will focus on the following results: s Implementation of appropriate health system reform. s Generation of new financing for health care, as well as more effective use of existing funds. s Design and implementation of health information systems for disease surveillance. s Delivery of quality services by health workers. s Availability and appropriate use of health commodities.
2000
This chapter assesses health financing policy in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs). It discusses the basic func-tions of health financing systems and the various mechanisms for effective revenue collection, pooling of resources, and pur-chase of interventions (WHO 2000). It analyzes the basic financing challenges facing LMICs as a result of revenue gener-ation and collection constraints, increasing flows of develop-ment assistance for
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