NHA Introduction - Counting Health Beans
- National Health Accounts (NHA): Systematic, comprehensive, and consistent monitoring of financial flows within a nation's health system. It maps the "economic footprint" of healthcare.
- Primary Goals:
- Track all health expenditure: sources, providers, functions, and beneficiaries.
- Inform evidence-based health policy, planning, and resource allocation.
- Enhance transparency, accountability, and system efficiency.
- Guiding Framework: System of Health Accounts (SHA) 2011 - an international standard.
- Provides common definitions, classifications (e.g., financing, providers, functions), and accounting rules for comparable data.
- NHA answers key questions:
- Who pays for healthcare? (e.g., Government, households, insurance)
- Who provides the services? (e.g., Hospitals, clinics, pharmacies)
- What services are consumed? (e.g., Curative, preventive, long-term care)
⭐ NHA data is crucial for tracking progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by monitoring key indicators like Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) as a percentage of total health expenditure. This is a major focus in India due to high OOPE levels (often >50%).
NHA Key Indicators - The Money Trail
- Total Health Expenditure (THE): Aggregate of all health spending (public & private) in a country.
- THE as % of GDP: Reflects national health spending priority. India (NHA 2019-20): 3.2%.
- Current Health Expenditure (CHE): THE excluding capital formation (e.g., new infrastructure).
- Government Health Expenditure (GHE): All public spending on health.
- GHE as % of THE (2019-20): 41.4%.
- GHE as % of GDP (2019-20): 1.33%.
- Includes Central, State, Local govt. & social security funds.
- Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE): Direct payments by households at point of service.
- OOPE as % of THE (2019-20): 47.1% (significant ↓ trend).
- Other: Private Health Insurance, NGOs, External/Donor funds.
- Government Health Expenditure (GHE): All public spending on health.
- The Money Trail (NHA Framework):
- Financing Sources (FS): Where money originates (e.g., Govt revenue, Household income).
- Financing Agents (FA) / Schemes: Entities managing funds (e.g., MoHFW, Insurance schemes).
- Healthcare Providers (HP): Entities delivering services (e.g., Hospitals, Pharmacies).
- Healthcare Functions (HC): Purpose of expenditure (e.g., Curative, Preventive care).
⭐ Key Exam Fact: A significant ↓ in Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) as a percentage of Total Health Expenditure (THE) is a major policy goal, indicating improved financial protection. India's OOPE fell from 62.6% (NHA 2014-15) to 47.1% (NHA 2019-20).
NHA India Profile - Rupee Health Report
- National Health Accounts (NHA) Estimates for India: Published periodically by National Health Systems Resource Centre (NHSRC) under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW).
- Key Indicators from NHA:
- Total Health Expenditure (THE): % of GDP. Recent trend: ~3.2-3.6% of GDP.
- Government Health Expenditure (GHE): % of THE. Recent trend: ↑, approx. 40-42%.
- Centre:State share in GHE is approx. 40:60.
- Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE): % of THE. Recent trend: ↓, but still high, approx. 47-49%.
- Major cause of catastrophic health expenditure and impoverishment.
- Private Health Expenditure: Includes OOPE, private insurance, NGO expenditure.
- Social Security Schemes: Contribution to THE is relatively low, approx. 5-9%.
- External/Donor Funding: % of THE, generally low, <1%.
- Per Capita Health Expenditure: Shows significant state-wise variations.
- Focus Areas:
- Primary healthcare expenditure share.
- Expenditure on preventive vs. curative care.
⭐ NHA 2019-20 Highlights: Government Health Expenditure (GHE) as a percentage of GDP increased from 1.13% in 2014-15 to 1.35% in 2019-20. Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) as a percentage of Total Health Expenditure (THE) decreased from 62.6% to 47.1% during the same period.
- Rupee Health Report: Often refers to analysis of how healthcare is financed and where the money goes, using NHA data as a primary source. Highlights state-level performance and disparities.
- Policy Implications: NHA data crucial for health policy formulation, resource allocation, and monitoring progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- National Health Accounts (NHA) track all health-related financial flows in a country.
- Key indicators: Total Health Expenditure (THE), Government Health Expenditure (GHE), Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE).
- NHA informs health policy, monitors spending, and allows international comparisons.
- India's NHA Cell is hosted by the National Health Systems Resource Centre (NHSRC).
- Follows the System of Health Accounts (SHA) 2011 global framework.
- Tracks desirable trends: ↑GHE/GDP, ↓OOPE/THE.
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