Asia Pacific should reduce inequalities in access to care
Access to health care has improved in the Asia Pacific
region over the past decade but women in low-income
households in rural areas still have difficulty accessing
care due to distance and financial reasons, according to a
new OECD report.
Health at a Glance Asia/Pacific 2018 –
Measuring Progress Towards Universal Health Coverage
says that in Cambodia, Nepal, the Philippines and the
Solomon Islands, more than three women in four with the
lowest household income reported difficulties in accessing
health care due to financial reasons. In Nepal, Pakistan and
the Solomon Islands, about two women in three from worst-off
households reported having unmet care needs due to
distance.
The report reveals that life expectancy has increased by almost six years since 2000 to reach 70 years across lower-middle and low-income Asia Pacific countries, but maternal mortality is still twice the Sustainable Development Goal target in these countries.
The report also tells that the infant mortality rate has fallen dramatically across the lower-middle and low income Asia Pacific countries since 2000, with many countries experiencing declines of greater than 50%. But at an average of 30 deaths per 1 000 live births, infant mortality rate in these countries is still eight times that of the high income Asia Pacific countries and OECD average, and two and a half times the SDG target of 12 deaths per 1 000 live births.
Many countries in the region face a double burden of disease, as they still struggle to reduce maternal and child deaths at a time when the prevalence of chronic conditions and unhealthy lifestyle is growing. More than one third of adults are overweight in Asia Pacific, and one in ten persons is obese, according to the report. Among children, 5% of under age 5 and more than 20% of adolescents are overweight. Between 2010 and 2016, obesity rates increased by 33% among adults and 58% among adolescents.
Other findings of Health at a Glance
Asia/Pacific 2018 include:
Between 2000
and 2015, the average maternal mortality rate across
lower-middle and low-income Asia Pacific countries was cut
by more than half, but is still high at 140 deaths per 100
000 live births, twice the SDG target of 70 deaths per 100
000 live births.
In high-income Asia Pacific
countries, the share of the population aged over 65 years is
expected to double, to reach an average of 27.6% in 2050,
whereas the share of population aged over 80 years is
expected to triple to reach 10.2%. In upper-middle income
and lower-middle low-income Asia Pacific countries, the
share of population over 65 and over 80 will be two and a
half and four times the current share, and reach 23.9% and
14.5% (over 65) and 7.9% and 3.5% (over 80)
respectively.
Lower-middle and low-income Asia
Pacific countries spend just under USD 200 per person per
year on health, against USD 670 and USD 3 450 in
upper-middle income and high-income countries respectively.
This amounts to over 4.3% of gross domestic product, on
average, in middle- and low-income countries, compared to
over 7.3% in high-income countries in 2015. Spending in
high-income countries increased by 0.8 percentage points
from 2010-2015, twice the increase reported by middle- and
low-income countries at 0.4 percentage points.
On average, household out-of-pocket expenditure accounted
for 48.2% of total health expenditure in lower-middle and
low-income Asia Pacific countries in 2015, an increase of
one percentage point from 2010. Spending on pharmaceuticals
accounted for almost one third of all health expenditure
across these countries in 2015.
Disparities in
the use of essential services based on income and education
remain large. For example, the divide in access to antenatal
care between women in low-income and high-income households
remains quite large in Bangladesh, Lao PDR and Pakistan, and
in Indonesia, Lao PDR and the Philippines inequalities in
the proportion of children with immunisation coverage whose
mother has high education compared to no education are large
with a difference of more than 50%.
Health at a
Glance Asia/Pacific 2018, a joint publication of
the OECD with the World Health Organisation, presents key
indicators on health status, determinants of health,
healthcare resources and utilisation, health expenditure and
financing, and quality of care for 27 Asia/Pacific countries
and territories. This report offers a comprehensive and
user-friendly framework to help policy makers make further
progress towards improving coverage, access and financial
protection of population across the Asia Pacific
region.
More information, together with a downloadable
PDF of the report, is available at: http://www.oecd.org/health/health-at-a-glance-asia-pacific-23054964.htm.