Abstract

SummaryBackgroundPrimary health care (PHC) is a driving force for advancing towards universal health coverage (UHC). PHC-oriented health systems bring enormous benefits but require substantial financial investments. Here, we aim to present measures for PHC investments and project the associated resource needs.MethodsThis modelling study analysed data from 67 low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Recognising the variation in PHC services among countries, we propose three measures for PHC, with different scope for included interventions and system strengthening. Measure 1 is centred on public health interventions and outpatient care; measure 2 adds general inpatient care; and measure 3 further adds cross-sectoral activities. Cost components included in each measure were based on the Declaration of Astana, informed by work delineating PHC within health accounts, and finalised through an expert and country validation meeting. We extracted the subset of PHC costs for each measure from WHO's Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) price tag for the 67 LMICs, and projected the associated health impact. Estimates of financial resource need, health workforce, and outpatient visits are presented as PHC investment guide posts for LMICs.FindingsAn estimated additional US$200–328 billion per year is required for the various measures of PHC from 2020 to 2030. For measure 1, an additional $32 is needed per capita across the countries. Needs are greatest in low-income countries where PHC spending per capita needs to increase from $25 to $65. Overall health workforces would need to increase from 5·6 workers per 1000 population to 6·7 per 1000 population, delivering an average of 5·9 outpatient visits per capita per year. Increasing coverage of PHC interventions would avert an estimated 60·1 million deaths and increase average life expectancy by 3·7 years. By 2030, these incremental PHC costs would be about 3·3% of projected gross domestic product (GDP; median 1·7%, range 0·1–20·2). In a business-as-usual financing scenario, 25 of 67 countries will have funding gaps in 2030. If funding for PHC was increased by 1–2% of GDP across all countries, as few as 16 countries would see a funding gap by 2030.InterpretationThe resources required to strengthen PHC vary across countries, depending on demographic trends, disease burden, and health system capacity. The proposed PHC investment guide posts advance discussions around the budgetary implications of strengthening PHC, including relevant system investment needs and achievable health outcomes. Preliminary findings suggest that low-income and lower-middle-income countries would need to at least double current spending on PHC to strengthen their systems and universally provide essential PHC services. Investing in PHC will bring substantial health benefits and build human capital. At country level, PHC interventions need to be explicitly identified, and plans should be made for how to most appropriately reorient the health system towards PHC as a key lever towards achieving UHC and the health-related SDGs.FundingThe Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Highlights

  • Primary health care (PHC) is globally acknowledged as an essential driving force for advancing universal health coverage (UHC) and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.[1]

  • Added value of this study To the best of our knowledge we develop here, for the first time, three measures that relate to investments to strengthen PHC-orientation in health systems, identifying both specific interventions and health systems requirements

  • These three measures are consistent with global definitions of PHC as agreed at the Global Conference on Primary Health Care, which emphasised that the three components of PHC as primary care and essential public health functions are the core of integrated health services; multisectoral policies and actions; and empowered people and communities.[4]

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Summary

Introduction

Primary health care (PHC) is globally acknowledged as an essential driving force for advancing universal health coverage (UHC) and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.[1] Investing in PHC yields high returns and promotes sustainability.[2] Yet, only half of government spending in health across low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) is currently allocated to primary care and public health interventions—ie, PHC services.[3] Ensuring quality PHC services should not be considered a low-cost strategy: investing in accessible health systems that provide a comprehensive set of interventions to all those in need can bring enormous benefits but will require significant financial investments. The Primary Health Care Performance Initiative was established in 2015 to support measurement of PHC-related variables, with PHC expenditure per capita as one recommended indicator. Our study takes an ingredients-based approach to be able to identify the specific inputs needed to strengthen PHC across different country contexts

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