New Publication: Universal health coverage in China part 1: progress and gaps

Abstract

Over the past 2 decades, China has made remarkable progress in health-care service coverage, especially in the areas of reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health, infectious diseases, and service capacity and access. In these areas, coverage is comparable to those in high-income countries. Inequalities of service coverage in these areas have been reduced. However, there remain large gaps in the service coverage of chronic diseases. There has been little progress in controlling risk factors of chronic diseases in the past 10 years. Service coverage for most chronic conditions is lower than in high-income countries. Moreover, China has disproportionately high incidences of catastrophic health expenditure compared with countries with similar economic development. This paper comprehensively evaluates China’s progress towards universal health coverage by identifying the achievements and gaps in service coverage and financial risk protection that are crucial to achieve universal health coverage goals by 2030.

Resources

  • Yip, Winnie, Hongqiao Fu, Weiyan Jian, Jue Liu, Jay Pan, Duo Xu, Hanmo Yang, Tiemin Zhai. 2023. “Universal health coverage in China part 1: progress and gaps.” The Lancet Public Health 2023;8(12):e1025-e1034. doi:10.1016/S2468-2667(23)00254-2
  • The companion paper “Universal health coverage in China part 2: addressing challenges and recommendations” is available here: doi:10.1016/S2468-2667(23)00255-4