- 1. Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing 100191, China;2. Center for Health Statistics and Information, Ministry of Health, Beijing 100044, China;
Objective To describe the criteria and procedure for defining an essential healthcare package in the developed and developing countries.
Method Search words were chosen by both health policy experts and search coordinators after discussion and pilot. We searched electronic databases, websites of health institutions and governments and search engine Google. Any reports of implemented strategy to develope an essential healthcare package were included. Pre-designed data extraction form was used for collecting strategies and study method of included studies. Then the extracted information was analyzed and described.
Result One hundred and sixty-six studies covering 72 countries were included, most of which were studies in the middle and low Countries. In terms of study objective,160 articles aimed to describe strategies, 6 articles aimed to evaluate effectiveness of strategies.Five studies evaluating effectiveness were cross-sectionnary data, and one study was time series.
Conclusion An appropriate package should be defined according to both technique criteria and social welfare criteria, considering each country’s healthcare system and market structure, characteristics of the demander and provider, capacity of government’s regulation. The experience in transition countries gives us more high lights.
Citation: YANG Li,WANG Jin,CAO Zhihui,SUN Jia,GAO Jun,XU Wenying,WU Ming. Strategies to Develope an Essential Healthcare Package: Definition, Package and Criteria. Chinese Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine, 2009, 09(6): 599-609. doi: 10.7507/1672-2531.20090108 Copy
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8. | Ensor T, Ali L, Hossain A, et al. Projecting the cost of essential services in Bangladesh. Nt J Health Plann Mgmt, 2003, 18: 137-149. |
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21. | Busse R. Health care systems in eight countries: trends and challenges. European Observatory on Health Care Systems, London, 2002. |
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42. | Knowles J. Strengthening Community Based Kenya Essential Care Package for Health (CB-KEPH) at the community level. The Ministry of Health, March 2006. |
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- 2. WHO. Primary health care: report of the International Conference on Primary Health Care, Alma-Ata 1978. Geneva, WHO, 1978.
- 3. World Bank. Investing in health: world development report 2003: New York, Oxford University Press.
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- 5. 汤胜蓝. 初级卫生保健发展与保障机制的国际经验. 初级卫生保健工作的快速政策咨询任务报告. 卫生部人才交流中心 2007. 4.
- 6. Tarimo E. Essential health service packages: uses, abuse and future directions. WHO, 1997.
- 7. Söderlund N. Possible Objectives and Resulting Entitlements of Essential Health Care Packages. Health Policy, 1998, 45(3): 195-208.
- 8. Ensor T, Ali L, Hossain A, et al. Projecting the cost of essential services in Bangladesh. Nt J Health Plann Mgmt, 2003, 18: 137-149.
- 9. Cumming J. Core services and priority-setting: the New Zealand experience. Health Policy, 1994, 29(1-2): 41-60.
- 10. Asian Development Bank Regional and Sustainable Development Department. Scaling up health sector potential for poverty reduction: lessons from Papua new guinea with selective references to Cambodia and Sri Lanka. Paper prepared for the Conference on Up-scaling Poverty Reduction Shanghai, 25-27 May, 2004.
- 11. Rutten F. How to define a basic package of health services for a tax funded or social insurance based health care system? HEPAC, 2001, 2: 45-46.
- 12. Pan American Health Organization, Organization and management of health systems and services division of health systems and services development. Health systems and services profile of Suriname. 1st Edition, June 2002.
- 13. Torbica A, Fattore G. The “Essential Levels of Care” in Italy: When being explicit serves the devolution of powers. Eur J Health Econ, 2005, 6(Suppl 1): 46-52.
- 14. Samvel G. health care system in transition Armenia. European Observatory on Health Care Systems, 2001, 3(11): 1020-1077.
- 15. Vargas-Barón E. Formative evaluation of parenting programmes in four countries of the CEE/CIS region: Belarus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Georgia and Kazakhstan. UNICEF Regional Office for Central and Eastern Europe and the Common Wealth of Independent States, Geneva 2006.
- 16. Hlavacka S, Wágner R, Riesberg A. Health Care Systems in Transition: Slovakia. WHO Regional Office for Europe on behalf of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, 2004, 6(10):.
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- 19. Charles C. Medical necessity in Canadian health policy: four meanings and a funeral? The Milbank Quarterly, 1997, 75(3): 365-394.
- 20. Bernfort L. Decisions on inclusion in the Swedish basic health care package—roles of cost-effectiveness and need. Health Care Analysis, 2003, 11(4): 301-308.
- 21. Busse R. Health care systems in eight countries: trends and challenges. European Observatory on Health Care Systems, London, 2002.
- 22. Knippenberg R. Implementation of the Bamako initiative: strategies in Benin and guinea. International Journal of Health Planning and Management, 1997, 12: S11-19.
- 23. Kapiriria L. Using burden of disease information for health planning in developing countries: the experience from Uganda. Social Science & Medicine, 2003, 56: 2433-2441.
- 24. Tragakes E, Lessof S. Health care systems in transition: Russian federation. Copenhagen, European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, 2003, 5(3): 1-197.
- 25. Figueras J. Health care systems in transition Belarus. World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe, 1997.
- 26. Chukwuani CM. A baseline survey of the Primary Healthcare System in South Eastern Nigeria. Health Policy, 2006, 77: 182-201.
- 27. Norheim OF. Adoption of new health care services in Norway (1993–1997): specialists’ self-assessment according to national criteria for priority setting. Health Policy, 2001, 56: 65-79.
- 28. Russel M. Applying DALY to assessing national health insurance performance: the relationship between the national health insurance expenditures and the burden of disease measures in Iran. Int J Health Plann Mgmt, 2005, 20: 89-98.
- 29. Ahlam A, Muneera H, AI-Osimy RN. A study of satisfaction among primary health care patients in Saudi Arabia. Journal of Community Health, 1993, 18(3): 163-173.
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- 31. Gross R, Brammli-Greenberg S. Evaluating the effect of regulatory prohibitions against risk selection by health status on supplemental insurance ownership in Israel. Social Science & Medicine, 2004, 58(9): 1609-1622.
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- 43. Mahfouz AA, Abdelmoneim I, Khan MY. Primary health care emergency services in Abha district of southwestern Saudi Arabia. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 2007, 13(1): 103.
- 44. Ensor T, Ali L, Hossain A, et al. Projecting the cost of essential services in Bangladesh. Nt J Health Plann Mgmt, 2003, 18: 137-149.
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- 68. Government of Rwanda. Health Sector Policy. Feb, 2005.
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- 70. Chernichovsky D, Chinitz D. The political economy of health system reform in Israel. Health Economics, 1995, 4(2): 127-141.
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- 82. Patel R. Development of an essential healthcare package (ehp) proposal for medical aid schemes in south Africa’s transition towards SHI. Board of Healthcare Funders of Southern Africa, February 2007.
- 83. Ministry of Health of Italy. The Italian National Health Service. 1999.
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- 85. World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific. Primary health care review project region specific report. Manila, Philippines, August 2002.
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- 87. Gakidou E. Assessing the effect of the 2001–06 Mexican health reform: an interim report card. Lancet, 2006, 368: 1920-1935.
- 88. Russel M. Applying DALY to assessing national health insurance performance: the relationship between the national health insurance expenditures and the burden of disease measures in Iran. Int J Health Plann Mgmt, 2005, 20: 89-98.
- 89. Devadasan N. The landscape of community health insurance in India: an overview based on 10 case studies. Health Policy, 2006, 78: 224-234.
- 90. Hauck K, Smith Pr C, Goddard M. The economics of priority setting for health care: a literature review. Health, Nutrition and Population (Hnp) Discussion Paper. September 2004.
- 91. Hrabaè B, Ljubiæ B, Bagariæ I. Basic package of health entitlements and solidarity in the federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Croatian Medical Journal, 2000, 41(3): 287-293.
- 92. World bank. Annex 8 – Health. www.Worldbank.Org.
- 93. Dlamini QQ. Impact of public-private partnerships addressing access to pharmaceuticals in low and middle income countries. Published By The Initiative On Public-Private Partnerships For Health, Global Forum For Health Research September 2004.
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