
Enhanced L4UHC Programme Goes Live
Nepal has made significant progress in improving drug availability. In this short video, Pukar Malla explains how L4UHC helped create a safe space to innovate, and the need to start small and think big.
Nepal has made significant progress in improving drug availability. In this short video, Pukar Malla explains how L4UHC helped create a safe space to innovate, and the need to start small and think big.
Nepal has made significant progress in improving drug availability. In this short video, Pukar Malla explains how L4UHC helped create a safe space to innovate, and the need to start small and think big.
Cameroon is politically committed to UHC but the different views of national stakeholders of how to achieve it have hindered progress. Better communication, aided by L4UHC, has made change possible.
The pandemic has highlighted the importance of leadership and a multi-sectoral approach – two of the key strengths L4UHC is fostering. But will governments heed the lessons and accelerate UHC’s roll-out?
UHC and health crisis management are two sides of the same coin, argues a blog from L4UHC’s partner, the World Bank. Governments need to honour their UHC commitments, it says.
Pakistan is making encouraging progress, but it still has a long way to go if UHC is to become truly ‘universal’ across the country, and not just confined to a few provinces.
WHO has published a Global Competency Framework for Universal Health Coverage, identifying the skills that health workers need in six key areas: people-centredness, decision-making, communication, collaboration, evidence-informed practice and personal conduct.
Climate change is major barrier to achieving UHC, according to a podcast jointly produced by the BMJ and The Harvard Global Health Institute. More intense heat, floods and other weather changes will not only alter the patterns of communicable and non-communicable diseases, but also disrupt systems and have significant economic impacts, challenging our ability to pay for healthcare.
Scaling up nutrition interventions with appropriate financing is essential for achieving UHC, say nutrition experts. But too often these ingredients for success are missing from basic health packages or the priority health services that a population receives.
Which principles should governments apply to allocate scarce resources fairly for healthcare? A group of 18 philosophers, economists, health policy experts and clinical doctors considered this question, amongst other ethical issues, and brought different perspectives to the table.
According to the WHO’s latest Global Monitoring Report for UHC, service coverage rates at the end of 2021 were well below their pre-pandemic levels and financial protection had also worsened significantly.
Representatives from three countries – Cambodia, Nepal and Pakistan – will be the first to participate in an enhanced version of the Leadership for UHC (L4UHC) programme, updated to address the challenges of the pandemic and to provide more intense country-level support.
After successfully completing its last two cycles in Africa and Asia, the L4UHC programme is preparing to evolve to take into account growing demand and the challenges highlighted by COVID, as well as lessons learned over the programme’s last two years.
We’re looking at new ways to deliver our programme in the context of travel bans and social distancing, and how we can adapt the programme’s content and methodology to support the country teams in responding to the crisis.
How can you ensure that your country initiatives are gender equitable and inclusive? Our new paper on this issue highlights some of the key questions you need to ask.
The Fifth Annual Health Financing Forum (AHFF) will take place virtually for the first time since the series began in 2016. This year, the AHFF is part of the COVID-19 Health Financing Resilience Program (COVID-19 HFRP).