Abstract
The world is united on the path to achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – in which, specifically in the realm of health, Universal Health Coverage is the central strat...
Highlights
The world is united on the path to achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – in which, in the realm of health, Universal Health Coverage is the central strategy for ‘leaving no-one behind.’ Fulfilling this commitment requires vigilance and political will on the part of each country through health inequality monitoring [1]
WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work calls for strategically disaggregating data when they are collected, analysed and reported across data sources, identifying health inequalities and their drivers to improve programme delivery, and acknowledging the centrality of health information systems for monitoring health inequalities [2]
WHO is committed to extending such support to additional equity-oriented activities that Indonesia may wish to undertake as well as other nations on this path
Summary
The world is united on the path to achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – in which, in the realm of health, Universal Health Coverage is the central strategy for ‘leaving no-one behind.’ Fulfilling this commitment requires vigilance and political will on the part of each country through health inequality monitoring [1]. WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work calls for strategically disaggregating data when they are collected, analysed and reported across data sources, identifying health inequalities and their drivers to improve programme delivery, and acknowledging the centrality of health information systems for monitoring health inequalities [2].
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