| Literature DB >> 24263249 |
Karin Stenberg1, Henrik Axelson2, Peter Sheehan3, Ian Anderson4, A Metin Gülmezoglu5, Marleen Temmerman5, Elizabeth Mason6, Howard S Friedman7, Zulfiqar A Bhutta8, Joy E Lawn9, Kim Sweeny3, Jim Tulloch10, Peter Hansen11, Mickey Chopra12, Anuradha Gupta13, Joshua P Vogel5, Mikael Ostergren6, Bruce Rasmussen3, Carol Levin14, Colin Boyle15, Shyama Kuruvilla16, Marjorie Koblinsky17, Neff Walker18, Andres de Francisco16, Nebojsa Novcic16, Carole Presern16, Dean Jamison14, Flavia Bustreo19.
Abstract
A new Global Investment Framework for Women's and Children's Health demonstrates how investment in women's and children's health will secure high health, social, and economic returns. We costed health systems strengthening and six investment packages for: maternal and newborn health, child health, immunisation, family planning, HIV/AIDS, and malaria. Nutrition is a cross-cutting theme. We then used simulation modelling to estimate the health and socioeconomic returns of these investments. Increasing health expenditure by just $5 per person per year up to 2035 in 74 high-burden countries could yield up to nine times that value in economic and social benefits. These returns include greater gross domestic product (GDP) growth through improved productivity, and prevention of the needless deaths of 147 million children, 32 million stillbirths, and 5 million women by 2035. These gains could be achieved by an additional investment of $30 billion per year, equivalent to a 2% increase above current spending.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24263249 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62231-X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321