| 13 Décembre 2017
TOKYO, December 13, 2017—At  least half of the world’s population cannot obtain essential health  services, according to a new report from the World Bank and the World  Health Organization. And each year, large numbers of households are  being pushed into poverty because they must pay for health care out of  their own pockets.
 
 Currently, 800 million people spend at least 10 percent of their  household budgets on health expenses for themselves, a sick child or  other family member. For almost 100 million people these expenses are  high enough to push them into extreme poverty, forcing them to survive  on just $1.90 or less a day. The findings, released today in Tracking Universal Health Coverage: 2017 Global Monitoring Report, have been simultaneously published in Lancet Global Health.
 
 “It is completely unacceptable that half the world still lacks coverage for the most essential health services,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization.  “And it is unnecessary. A solution exists: universal health coverage  (UHC) allows everyone to obtain the health services they need, when and  where they need them, without facing financial hardship.” 
 
 “The report makes clear  that if we are serious – not just about better health outcomes, but also  about ending poverty – we must urgently scale up our efforts on  universal health coverage,” said World Bank Group President Dr. Jim Yong Kim. “Investments in health, and more generally investments in people, are  critical to build human capital and enable sustainable and inclusive  economic growth. But the system is broken: we need a fundamental shift  in the way we mobilize resources for health and human capital,  especially at the country level. We are working on many fronts to help  countries spend more and more effectively on people, and increase their  progress towards universal health coverage.” 
 
 There is some good news: The report shows that the 21st century has seen an increase in the number of people able to obtain some  key health services, such as immunization and family planning, as well  as antiretroviral treatment for HIV and insecticide-treated bed nets to  prevent malaria. In addition, fewer people are now being tipped into  extreme poverty than at the turn of the century.
 
 Progress, however, is very uneven.
 
 There are wide gaps in the availability of services in Sub-Saharan  Africa and Southern Asia. In other regions, basic health care services  such as family planning and infant immunization are becoming more  available, but lack of financial protection means increasing financial  distress for families as they pay for these services out of their own  pockets. This is even a challenge in more affluent regions such as  Eastern Asia, Latin America and Europe, where a growing number of people  are spending at least 10 percent of their household budgets on  out-of-pocket health expenses. Inequalities in health services are seen  not just between, but also within countries: national averages can mask  low levels of health service coverage in disadvantaged population  groups. For example, only 17 percent of mothers and children in the  poorest fifth of households in low- and lower-middle income countries  received at least six of seven basic maternal and child health  interventions, compared to 74 percent for the wealthiest fifth of  households.
 
 The report is a key point of discussion at the global Universal Health Coverage Forum 2017,  currently taking place in Tokyo, Japan. Convened by the Government of  Japan, a leading supporter of UHC domestically and globally, the Forum  is cosponsored by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA),  UHC2030, the leading global movement advocating for UHC, UNICEF, the  World Bank, and WHO. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, UN  Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, World Bank President Kim, WHO  Director-General Tedros and UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake will  all be in attendance, in addition to heads of state and ministers from  over 30 countries.
 
 “Past  experiences taught us that designing a robust health financing mechanism  that protects each individual vulnerable person from financial  hardship, as well as developing health care facilities and a workforce  including doctors to provide necessary health services wherever people  live, are critically important in achieving ‘Health for All,’” said Mr. Katsunobu Kato, Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare, Japan. “I firmly believe that these early-stage investments for UHC by the  whole government were an important enabling factor in Japan’s rapid  economic development later on.” 
 
 The Forum is the culmination of events in over 100 countries, which  began on Dec. 12—Universal Health Coverage Day—to highlight the growing  global momentum on UHC. It seeks to showcase the strong high-level  political commitment to UHC at global and country levels, highlight the  experiences of countries that have been pathfinders on UHC progress, and  add to the knowledge base on how to strengthen health systems and  effectively promote UHC.
 
 The main high-level sessions of the Forum take place tomorrow, Dec. 14,  and will also feature an all-day “innovation showcase,” highlighting  innovations driving progress in health systems around the world, and a  celebratory public event in the evening. A commitment to action, called  the Tokyo Declaration on Universal Health Coverage, will be released  during the Forum’s closing ceremony.
 
 “Without health care, how  can children reach their full potential? And without a healthy,  productive population, how can societies realize their  aspirations?” said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake. “Universal  health coverage can help level the playing field for children today, in  turn helping them break intergenerational cycles of poverty and poor  health tomorrow.” 
 
 Building on the G7 Ise-Shima Summit and the TICAD VI in 2016, both of  which stress the need for UHC, the Forum in Tokyo is seen as a milestone  for accelerating progress towards the target of UHC by 2030, a key part  of the Sustainable Development Goals. Countries will then gear up for  the next global moment: a high-level meeting of the UN General Assembly  on UHC in 2019.