| Literature DB >> 24399923 |
Jonathan Quick1, Jonathan Jay2, Ana Langer3.
Abstract
Jonathan Quick and colleagues discuss how women's health world-wide can be improved through universal health coverage.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24399923 PMCID: PMC3882205 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Critical factors for designing and implementing UHC to improve women's health.
| Factor | Challenges for Women's Health and Equity | Critical Actions for UHC Design and Implementation |
| 1. Essential services package | Service packages often lack elements essential for women's health | Incorporate all essential services for women throughout the life course, including:• Contraception and reproductive health services.• Antenatal care, skilled birth attendants, emergency obstetrical care, post-partum care, other elements of safe motherhood.• Preventing, screening, treatment for breast, cervical, other women's cancers.• Abortion services, where legal. |
| 2. Access to services | Especially for women with multiple work, household, family responsibilities access may be reduced by:• Separation of services in different facilities or on different schedules (e.g., prenatal care, childhood immunizations, AIDS treatment).• Physical distance and hours of service create barriers for women with household and family responsibilities. | Promote convenient, close-to-home services by, for example:• Integrating services to the maximum extent to allow “one stop” services for women, children.• Combining AIDS screening with confirmation and initiation of treatment.• Legalizing and reimbursing contraception provided by pharmacies, licensed drug sellers.• Addressing health workforce shortages, including scaling up community-level providers who can deliver essential services for women. |
| 3. Financial barriers | • OOP payments are generally greater for women than for men | • For insurance-based UHC, subsidize premiums to ensure coverage for women.• Eliminate or minimize OOP payments for priority women's health services. |
| 4. Social and other non-financial barriers | Social and other non-financial barriers to care may include:• Lack of female health providers, provider attitude.• Cultural or legal expectations for husband or parental permission for care. | Systematically monitor women's access to services across locally relevant dimensions, which may include cultural, health provider, and other factors |
| 5. Performance monitoring indicators | • Excessive focus on indicators of financing, OOP payments, and impoverishment may overshadow indicators of service delivery and health outcomes. | As illustrated in |
OOP, out-of-pocket.
Examples of key service delivery and health outcome indicators for women's health.
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| • Contraceptive prevalence rate |
| • Unmet family planning needs |
| • Antenatal care coverage |
| • Deliveries with skilled birth attendant |
| • Access to life-saving commodities and essential medicines along continuum of reproductive health care |
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| • Maternal mortality ratio |
| • Adolescent birth rate |
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| • Coverage inequality for antenatal, skilled birth attendant, and family planning coverage (ratio and absolute differences for poorest versus richest quintiles |
| • Gender disparities in priority health outcomes (e.g. NCD, HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria) |
| • Gender disparities in impoverishment/financial protection for health |