| Literature DB >> 32546586 |
Ché L Reddy1,2, Alexander W Peters3,4, Desmond Tanko Jumbam3,2, Luke Caddell3, Blake C Alkire3,5,6, John G Meara3,2, Rifat Atun7,8.
Abstract
Strong surgical systems are necessary to prevent premature death and avoidable disability from surgical conditions. The epidemiological transition, which has led to a rising burden of non-communicable diseases and injuries worldwide, will increase the demand for surgical assessment and care as a definitive healthcare intervention. Yet, 5 billion people lack access to timely, affordable and safe surgical and anaesthesia care, with the unmet demand affecting predominantly low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Rapid surgical care scale-up is required in LMICs to strengthen health system capabilities, but adequate financing for this expansion is lacking. This article explores the critical role of innovative financing in scaling up surgical care in LMICs. We locate surgical system financing by using a modified fiscal space analysis. Through an analysis of published studies and case studies on recent trends in the financing of global health systems, we provide a conceptual framework that could assist policy-makers in health systems to develop innovative financing strategies to mobilise additional investments for scale-up of surgical care in LMICs. This is the first time such an analysis has been applied to the funding of surgical care. Innovative financing in global surgery is an untapped potential funding source for expanding fiscal space for health systems and financing scale-up of surgical care in LMICs. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: health economics; health policy; health systems; public health; surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32546586 PMCID: PMC7299051 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-002375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1The six domains of National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Plans (NSOAPs) Source: Adapted from Citron et al.59 UHC, Universal Health Coverage.
Current NSOAP and their costs of implementation
| Country | GDP per capita (World Bank 2017) | Population | NSOAP years | Total NSOAP cost | NSOAP cost per year per capita | NSOAP cost/cap as a percentage of GDP/cap | NSOAP cost/cap as a percentage of health spending/cap |
| Zambia | US$1509.80 | 17.3 million | 5 years | US$314 million | US$3.62 | 0.24 | 6.49 |
| Tanzania | US$936.33 | 56.3 million | 7 years | US$597 million | US$1.51 | 0.16 | 4.20 |
| Rwanda | US$748.39 | 12.3 million | 6 years | US$69.7 million | US$0.94 | 0.13 | 1.98 |
| Nigeria | US$1968.56 | 195.9 million | 5 years | US$6.8 billion | US$17.12 | 0.87 | 22.18 |
Source: Jumbam et al.15
GDP, gross domestic product; NSOAP, National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Plans.
Figure 2Health focus areas for DAH: 1990–2018 Source: Financing Global Health (No changes).60 DAH, Development Assistance for Health.
Figure 3DAH percentage of total health expenditure for southern African countries. Source: financing global health.60 DAH, Development Assistance for Health.
Figure 4Value chain framework for innovative financing Source: Adapted from Atun et al.47
Comparison of innovative financing case studies
| Mechanism | Type | Key innovation | Strength | Weakness |
| Unitaid | Voluntary Solidarity Levy | Microlevy | Does not reduce consumer demand, can also be applied to externalities | Levy requires high quantity of sales on consistent and predictable goods |
| Product(RED) | Voluntary Contribution | Contributions on retail goods | Unlocks funding from purchases on goods with low elasticity | Consumer dependent |
| GAVI | Performance-Based Instruments | Advanced Market Commitment | Increases supply of health products in which there is little market incentive for manufacturers to produce | Manufacturer dependent |
| IFFIm and CIFF | Bonds (IFFIm) and Securities (CIFF) | ‘Vaccine’ Bonds (IFFIm), private investment funding model adapted to include social value based on health (CIFF) | Ability to: increase purchasing of specific health products (bonds) and; use capital markets to address unmet societal needs for shared value (securities) | Resistance to shared value in global finance |
Source: original
CIFF, Children’s Investment Fund Foundation; IFFIm, International Finance Facility for Immunisation.
Components of fiscal space
| Fiscal space pillar | Explanation and example |
| 1. Macroeconomic conditions | Increased GDP growth |
| 2. Reprioritisation of government budget | Increased health budget as a proportion of national fiscus |
| 3. Health sector-specific resources | Sugar-tax to finance diabetic screening at primary healthcare level |
| 4. Efficiency of existing resources | Evaluation of National Health Accounts to identify and reduce wasteful expenditure |
| 5. External sources | Increase funding from bilateral organisations |
| 6. Innovative financing | Global Fund financing of antiretrovirals to support a National HIV/AIDS programme |
Source: Adapted from Tandon and Cashin52.
GDP, gross domestic product; UHC, Universal Health Coverage.
Figure 5Framework for innovative financing and surgical systems. Source: original.