The Impact of Universal Coverage Schemes in the Developing World : A Review of the Existing Evidence

The document is organized as follows. Chapter two provides an introduction to the conceptual framework guiding this study. It is organized in three sections. First, it discusses the concept of universal coverage and the health schemes and programs the concept refers to. Second, it discusses the causal link between universal coverage schemes and health-related outcome indicators. Third, it presents key methodological challenges faced by analysts wishing to evaluate the impact of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) schemes. Chapter three presents the methodology used to search, include, and evaluate the robustness of the existing literature. Chapter four presents the results of our search and inclusion criteria and describes the general characteristics of the literature reviewed. Chapter five provides an analysis of the robustness of the evidence. Chapter six synthesizes the evidence of the literature on the impact of universal coverage schemes in low-income and middle-income countries. Finally, the last chapter summarizes our findings and their policy and research implications.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giedion, Ursula, Andrés Alfonso, Eduardo, Díaz, Yadira
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington DC 2013-01
Subjects:access to health care, access to health care services, access to health services, access to services, alternative health care, ambulance, ambulance service, catastrophic health expenditure, chronic diseases, delivery of health care, Description, determinants of health, diagnosis, entitlement, environmental factors, expenditures, exposure, financial barriers, financial catastrophe, financial consequences, financial protection, financial risks, gender, health care, health care financing, health care services, health care system, health centre, Health Coverage, health expenditure, health experts, health facilities, health insurance, health insurance coverage, health insurance plans, Health Insurance Program, health insurance schemes, health interventions, health needs, Health Organization, health outcomes, health sector, health service, health service utilization, health services, health status, health status indicators, health system, health systems, health-system, healthcare, healthcare services, high blood pressure, holistic approach, households, illness, impact evaluations, income, income countries, income groups, infant mortality, insurance contributions, International comparisons, intervention, labor market, life expectancy, localities, low-income countries, medical care, medical insurance, Medical Savings Accounts, mental health, moral hazard, mortality, national health, Nutrition, outpatient care, patients, pharmacy, physician, Placebos, pocket payments, population groups, preventive care, primary care, private health insurance, promoting health, provision of care, provision of services, public health, public health policies, public provision, Quality of Life, randomized controlled trials, referrals, rehabilitation, safety, screening, Social Health Insurance, Social Science, Social Security, use of health care services, use of health services,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13302
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!