Improving equity in the distribution and financing of health services in Mauritius, a small island state with deeply rooted welfare state standards

Author:

Nundoochan Ajoy

Abstract

BackgroundEnsuring benefits of free healthcare services are accessible to those in need is essential to achieve universal health coverage (UHC). Mauritius has sustained a welfare state over four decades with free health services in all public facilities. However, paradoxically, the national UHC service coverage index stood at only 63 in 2017. An assessment of who benefits from health interventions is, therefore, vital to shape future health financing strategies.MethodsThe study applied benefit incidence analysis (BIA) to understand the distribution of healthcare utilisation and spending in comparison to income distribution. Also, a financial incidence analysis (FIA) was conducted to assess the progressivity of the health financing systems. Data from the national survey on household out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditure for health were used for the purpose of BIA and FIA. Concentration curves and concentration indices (CI) were nationally estimated and disaggregated to rural/urban levels. Kakwani index (KI) was calculated to assess the progressivity of private healthcare financing.ResultsThe CI for outpatient, inpatient and day care within the public health sector is estimated at −0.33, –0.14 and −0.14, respectively. Overall, CI in the public sector is −0.26. Benefit distribution in the private sector is pro-rich with CI of 0.27. Healthcare financing is regressive as demonstrated by a KI of −0.004, with the poorest population groups contributing a large share, in terms of taxes and OOP, to finance the health system.ConclusionThe BIA posits that government spending on public healthcare has resulted in significant pro-poor services distribution. This is largely offset by pro-rich distribution in the private sector. Thus, implying health financing strategies must be reviewed to promote financial protection against catastrophic health payments and bolster efforts to improve UHC service coverage index and achieve UHC Target 3.8 under Sustainable Development Goal 3.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference48 articles.

1. United Nations General Assembly . 74th session political Declaration of the high-level meeting on universal health coverage

2. International Monetary Fund . World economic outlook database, 2020.

3. Ministry of Health & Wellness, Republic of Mauritius . Annual Health Statistics.

4. World Health Organization . World health statistics 2021: monitoring health for the SDGs, sustainable development goals. WHO, 2021.

5. Ministry of Health & Quality of Life, Republic of Mauritius . Survey report 2015 household out of pocket expenditure on health, 2015.

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