|
| ||
Governments not spending enough on health: WHO |
||
Governments not spending enough on health: WHO
MANILA, 3 March 2010—The World Health Organization (WHO) today called on governments across the Asia Pacific region to spend more on health in order to cut out-of-pocket health-care costs for the poor and vulnerable.
Outlining a new strategy designed to help reduce payments for medical care, Dr Shin Young-soo, WHO Regional Director for the Western Pacific, stressed that poverty and poor health are linked together in a downward spiral.
"When the poor fall sick, the cost of treatment – if they can afford it at all – often tips them further into hardship," said Dr Shin. "And when that happens, they are even more susceptible to ill-health. And the result of that is greater poverty."
Dr Shin said this was an especially acute problem in the Asia Pacific region, where out-of-pocket health-care costs are among the highest in the world. In some countries in the region, more than 60% of money spent on health care comes from the patient's pocket. By contrast, in Germany an average of just 13% of all medical expenses are borne by the patient, with the rest covered by social health insurance or by the Government.
ENDS
U.S. Politics: STOCK Act Passes House - 'Political Intelligence' Omission
Exhibition - West Papuan Women of Resistance: Dear Friends Of Art And West Papua
U.S. Politics: David Swanson: The Election We Should Be Following
Greenpeace: Industry Figures Confirm GM Food Is European Commercial Flop
Asia: IFJ Press Freedom In China Campaign Bulletin
Women’s Rights: 2,000 African Communities Abandon Female Genital Mutilation
Connie Lawn: Newt Gingrich Wins In South Carolina
Pacific.Scoop: Real Change In Burma No Longer A Pipe Dream – But Don’t Jump The Gun
Burma: After Political Prisoner Amnesty, Ethnic Warfare Is Rekindled In North