PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

A country-level comparison of access to quality surgical and non-surgical healthcare from 1990-2016.

  • Taylor Wurdeman,
  • Gopal Menon,
  • John G Meara,
  • Blake C Alkire

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 11
p. e0241669

Abstract

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BackgroundThe Healthcare Access and Quality (HAQ) index, developed by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, uses estimates of amenable mortality to quantify health system performance over time. While much is known about general health system performance globally, few studies have portrayed the performance of surgical systems. In order to quantify access to quality surgical care, evaluate changes over time, and link these changes to health care investments, surgical and non-surgical Health Access and Quality sub-indices were developed.DesignWe categorized 32 amenable mortality causes as either surgical or non-surgical conditions. Using principal components analysis and scaled amenable mortality rates, we constructed a surgical and non-surgical Health Access and Quality sub-index. Using these sub-indices, relative improvement over time was compared. An expenditure model with country fixed effects was built to explore drivers of differences in relative improvement of sub-indices.ResultsCompared to low-income countries, high-income countries have been 2.77 times more effective at improving surgical care (p Conclusions and relevanceGlobal health investment must prioritize strengthening health systems as opposed to the historically favored vertical programming. In order to achieve health equity in low-income countries, more focus should be placed on domestic financing of surgical systems. Health Access and Quality sub-indices can be used by countries to identify targets, monitor progress, and evaluate interventions aimed at improving access to quality surgical healthcare.