TY - JOUR AU - Prabhakaran Dorairaj AU - Bhutta Zulfiqar AU - Patel Vikram AU - Wu Yangfeng AU - Watkins David AU - Kruk Margaret AU - Patton George AU - Jamison Dean AU - Alwan Ala AU - Mock Charles AU - Nugent Rachel AU - Adeyi Olusoji AU - Anand Shuchi AU - Atun Rifat AU - Bertozzi Stefano AU - Binagwaho Agnes AU - Black Robert AU - Blecher Mark AU - Bloom Barry AU - Brouwer Elizabeth AU - Bundy Donald AU - Chisholm Dan AU - Cieza Alarcos AU - Cullen Mark AU - Danforth Kristen AU - de Silva Nilanthi AU - Debas Haile AU - Donkor Peter AU - Dua Tarun AU - Fleming Kenneth AU - Gallivan Mark AU - Garcia Patricia AU - Gawande Atul AU - Gaziano Thomas AU - Gelband Hellen AU - Glass Roger AU - Glassman Amanda AU - Gray Glenda AU - Habte Demissie AU - Holmes King AU - Horton Susan AU - Hutton Guy AU - Jha Prabhat AU - Knaul Felicia AU - Kobusingye Olive AU - Krakauer Eric AU - Lachmann Peter AU - Laxminarayan Ramanan AU - Levin Carol AU - Looi Lai AU - Madhav Nita AU - Mahmoud Adel AU - Mbanya Jean AU - Measham Anthony AU - Medina-Mora María AU - Medlin Carol AU - Mills Anne AU - Mills Jody-Anne AU - Montoya Jaime AU - Norheim Ole AU - Olson Zachary AU - Omokhodion Folashade AU - Oppenheim Ben AU - Ord Toby AU - Peabody John AU - Qi Jinyuan AU - Reynolds Teri AU - Ruacan Sevket AU - Sankaranarayanan Rengaswamy AU - Sepúlveda Jaime AU - Skolnik Richard AU - Smith Kirk AU - Temmerman Marleen AU - Tollman Stephen AU - Verguet Stéphane AU - Walker Damian AU - Walker Neff AU - Zhao Kun AB -

The World Bank is publishing nine volumes of Disease Control Priorities, 3rd edition (DCP3) between 2015 and 2018. Volume 9, Improving Health and Reducing Poverty, summarises the main messages from all the volumes and contains cross-cutting analyses. This Review draws on all nine volumes to convey conclusions. The analysis in DCP3 is built around 21 essential packages that were developed in the nine volumes. Each essential package addresses the concerns of a major professional community (eg, child health or surgery) and contains a mix of intersectoral policies and health-sector interventions. 71 intersectoral prevention policies were identified in total, 29 of which are priorities for early introduction. Interventions within the health sector were grouped onto five platforms (population based, community level, health centre, first-level hospital, and referral hospital). DCP3 defines a model concept of essential universal health coverage (EUHC) with 218 interventions that provides a starting point for country-specific analysis of priorities. Assuming steady-state implementation by 2030, EUHC in lower-middle-income countries would reduce premature deaths by an estimated 4·2 million per year. Estimated total costs prove substantial: about 9·1% of (current) gross national income (GNI) in low-income countries and 5·2% of GNI in lower-middle-income countries. Financing provision of continuing intervention against chronic conditions accounts for about half of estimated incremental costs. For lower-middle-income countries, the mortality reduction from implementing the EUHC can only reach about half the mortality reduction in non-communicable diseases called for by the Sustainable Development Goals. Full achievement will require increased investment or sustained intersectoral action, and actions by finance ministries to tax smoking and polluting emissions and to reduce or eliminate (often large) subsidies on fossil fuels appear of central importance. DCP3 is intended to be a model starting point for analyses at the country level, but country-specific cost structures, epidemiological needs, and national priorities will generally lead to definitions of EUHC that differ from country to country and from the model in this Review. DCP3 is particularly relevant as achievement of EUHC relies increasingly on greater domestic finance, with global developmental assistance in health focusing more on global public goods. In addition to assessing effects on mortality, DCP3 looked at outcomes of EUHC not encompassed by the disability-adjusted life-year metric and related cost-effectiveness analyses. The other objectives included financial protection (potentially better provided upstream by keeping people out of the hospital rather than downstream by paying their hospital bills for them), stillbirths averted, palliative care, contraception, and child physical and intellectual growth. The first 1000 days after conception are highly important for child development, but the next 7000 days are likewise important and often neglected.

BT - Lancet C1 - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29179954?dopt=Abstract DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32906-9 IS - 10125 J2 - Lancet LA - eng N2 -

The World Bank is publishing nine volumes of Disease Control Priorities, 3rd edition (DCP3) between 2015 and 2018. Volume 9, Improving Health and Reducing Poverty, summarises the main messages from all the volumes and contains cross-cutting analyses. This Review draws on all nine volumes to convey conclusions. The analysis in DCP3 is built around 21 essential packages that were developed in the nine volumes. Each essential package addresses the concerns of a major professional community (eg, child health or surgery) and contains a mix of intersectoral policies and health-sector interventions. 71 intersectoral prevention policies were identified in total, 29 of which are priorities for early introduction. Interventions within the health sector were grouped onto five platforms (population based, community level, health centre, first-level hospital, and referral hospital). DCP3 defines a model concept of essential universal health coverage (EUHC) with 218 interventions that provides a starting point for country-specific analysis of priorities. Assuming steady-state implementation by 2030, EUHC in lower-middle-income countries would reduce premature deaths by an estimated 4·2 million per year. Estimated total costs prove substantial: about 9·1% of (current) gross national income (GNI) in low-income countries and 5·2% of GNI in lower-middle-income countries. Financing provision of continuing intervention against chronic conditions accounts for about half of estimated incremental costs. For lower-middle-income countries, the mortality reduction from implementing the EUHC can only reach about half the mortality reduction in non-communicable diseases called for by the Sustainable Development Goals. Full achievement will require increased investment or sustained intersectoral action, and actions by finance ministries to tax smoking and polluting emissions and to reduce or eliminate (often large) subsidies on fossil fuels appear of central importance. DCP3 is intended to be a model starting point for analyses at the country level, but country-specific cost structures, epidemiological needs, and national priorities will generally lead to definitions of EUHC that differ from country to country and from the model in this Review. DCP3 is particularly relevant as achievement of EUHC relies increasingly on greater domestic finance, with global developmental assistance in health focusing more on global public goods. In addition to assessing effects on mortality, DCP3 looked at outcomes of EUHC not encompassed by the disability-adjusted life-year metric and related cost-effectiveness analyses. The other objectives included financial protection (potentially better provided upstream by keeping people out of the hospital rather than downstream by paying their hospital bills for them), stillbirths averted, palliative care, contraception, and child physical and intellectual growth. The first 1000 days after conception are highly important for child development, but the next 7000 days are likewise important and often neglected.

PY - 2018 SP - 1108 EP - 1120 T2 - Lancet TI - Universal health coverage and intersectoral action for health: key messages from Disease Control Priorities, 3rd edition. VL - 391 SN - 1474-547X ER -