| Literature DB >> 24160168 |
Kalipso Chalkidou1, Jeanette Vega.
Abstract
As the UK reiterates its commitment to protecting and growing its development aid budget amidst an adverse economic environment for the UK and Europe, we discuss the potential to use the country's National Health Service (NHS) model as a vehicle for promoting the country's economic as well as global health diplomacy and development priorities, through a coordinated cross-government plan of action. With the country's Prime Minister serving as a co-chair of the UN post-2015 development agenda panel,a this is a unique opportunity for the UK to put forward its health system architecture as a highly applicable and well-tested model for providing access to efficient and cost-effective care, with minimal financial hardship. Arguably, such a model tailored to the needs of specific countries could consequently lead to commercial opportunities for UK plc. in areas such as consulting, training, education and healthcare products. Finally, this approach would be consistent with the current thinking on the evolving role of UK aid, especially in the case of emerging powers such as India, where the focus has shifted from aid to investment in technical assistance and cooperation as a means of boosting bilateral business and trade.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24160168 PMCID: PMC4015752 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-9-51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Figure 1Getting the balance right. The National Health Service can serve as a means of meeting the triple objective of poverty eradication and development through universal coverage; global health diplomacy and relationship building; and, improving trade and the UK’s commercial interests overseas.
Core attributes of the National Health Service, reflecting one possible (and fairly successful) implementation of a Universal Healthcare Coverage system
| Cradle-to-grave system, covering effective and cost-effective health care, public health and complementary social care. In the 'ultimate’ case, 'comprehensiveness’ embraces all health determinants from pre-natal to the grave. | |
| All residents of the UK (citizens, legal and illegal immigrants) are covered. | |
| Care is free at the point of use | |
| Progressive general taxation funding | |
| Centralised resource allocation formula which takes account of need, deprivation, market forces | |
| NICE explicitly accounts for the opportunity cost of new investment decisions in services and technologies | |
| Mix of public, private and third sector, all under contractual arrangements to offer care to NHS patients based on fee schedule and quality standards | |
| Small (and shrinking) private market co-exists with the NHS but no opt-out of the NHS exists for British tax-payers |
Recent initiatives by Her Majesty’s Government for promoting the NHS overseas
| Health Partnerships Schemeo | Aims “to support the development of health services in some of the world’s poorest countries” drawing on the experience of the NHS, academe and professional organisations. | Department for International Development – DFID; (NHS organisations and employees) |
| Health is Globalp | An attempt to articulate a cross-government vision for global health, through an outcomes framework for global health (2011–2015) setting out set out how UK Government departments should work together coherently to improve health in the UK and overseas | Department of Health – DH; (DFID) |
| Global Development Partnerships Programmeq | Aimed at ensuring coordination between DFID and other government departments and No 10, with an emphasis on DFID’s engagement with emerging powers and a view to catalyse South/South partnerships and boost the civic/donor responsibility of the BRICS countries. | DFID |
| Healthcare UK | New (Dec 2012) unit jointly sponsored and resourced by UKTI and DH and hosted by UKTI aimed at exporting UK expertise in healthcare (NHS and commercial), through a project-specific high priority country approach. | UK Trade and Industry/BIS; (DH) |
| NHS Globalr | Predecessor to Healthcare UK, with a predominantly commercial focus aimed at supporting NHS-span businesses abroad | NHS (FCO; UKTI/BIS) |
| India – UK CEO Forums | Established by the British and Indian Prime Ministers in 2010 to help achieve the two governments’ aim “to be ambitious in seeking to substantially increase trade and significantly increase investment between the UK and India”. Health identified as one of 4 key priorities [ | Government of India – UK Government; |
| For health: Wellcome Trust and No 10; (DH; UKTI; FCO; DFID) | ||
| Innovation, Health and Wealtht | NHS strategy (Dec 2011) for embracing and embedding innovation across the NHS, improving outcomes and driving growth for the UK. Sets out a requirement for NHS organisations to increase national and international activity” with a focus on commercial income generating opportunities. | NHS; (UKTI) |
An example of a system-wide approach attracting cross-government support[27]
| NICE International, a non-profit, cost-recouping division of the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, was set up by NICE’s Board in 2008, to support overseas governments with developing and applying the necessary technical and institutional capacity to improving the quality and efficiency of their healthcare systems.a To achieve this, NICE International mobilises its own as well as broader NHS and non-NHS resources, front-line NHS professionals and UK Universities. | Traditionally relied on non-UK funding, from the World Bank, national governments of client countries, the European Commission, regional development banks such as the Inter American Development Bank, and, increasingly on philanthropic funders such as the Rockefeller Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. |
| During the second half of 2012, NICE International has received substantive funding support from the Department of International Development supplemented by funding from the Department of Health and small scale Foreign Office support mostly from FCO China, Brazil and the Philippines. NICE International has also been more directly involved in UKTI trade collaborative propositions, together with UK companies, in China and the Middle East | |
| NICE International is perhaps one example (with its strengths and weaknesses) for scaling up, across other parts of the NHS, cross-government working, driven by overseas governments’ requests for NHS expertise | |