Abstract

Universal health coverage is a key health target in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that has the means to link equitable social and economic development. As a concept firmly based on equity, it is widely accepted at international and national levels as important for populations to attain 'health for all' especially for marginalised groups. However, implementing universal coverage has been fraught with challenges and the increasing privatisation of health care provision adds to the challenge because it is being implemented in a health system that rests on a property regime that promotes inequality. This paper asks the question, 'What does an equitable health system look like?' rather than the usual 'How do you make the existing health system more equitable?' Using an ethnographic approach, the authors explored via interviews, focus group discussions and participant observation a health system that uses the commons approach such as which exists with indigenous peoples and found features that helped make the system intrinsically equitable. Based on these features, the paper proposes an alternative basis to organise universal health coverage that will better ensure equity in health systems and ultimately contribute to meeting the SDGs.

Highlights

  • A key area of health systems research has been the issue of health equity

  • Endorsed by WHO since 2005, it is primed for a leading role in meeting Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) targets [86]

  • Since the gap between the concept of universal health coverage (UHC) and operationalising it depends on how it is defined, the current global emphasis is clearly narrowed down to health care financing followed by clinical health services [88]

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Summary

Introduction

A key area of health systems research has been the issue of health equity. While a health care system is commonly viewed as a complex social institution designed to provide biomedical interventions that produce better individual health, health care systems should promote a wider set of societal values and norms that contribute to overall social good [1, 2]. The underlying values of equity expressed is meant to be actualised in universal health coverage (UHC) whose goal is to ensure that all people obtain the health services they need [3] and is becoming the significant SDG health goal that links equitable social and economic development, and combines financial risk protection with equitable access to essential services [4]. Efforts to implement UHC rest on top of a system that intrinsically promotes inequality [8]. What effect will this have on achieving UHC and further on, the ultimate success of the SDG goals?

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