Health and health system effects on poverty: A narrative review of global evidence

ElsevierVolume 142, April 2024, 105018Health PolicyAuthor links open overlay panelHighlights•

Ill-health causes poverty through multiple mechanisms that span lifetimes and cross generations.

Health-related loss of earnings often impacts poverty more than spending on healthcare.

Universal health coverage and social insurance weaken the health effect on poverty.

Health system capacity and incentives complement public health insurance in reducing poverty.

Abstract

Ill-health causes poverty. The effect runs through multiple mechanisms that span lifetimes and cross generations. Health systems can reduce poverty by improving health and weakening links from ill-health to poverty. This paper maps routes through which ill-health can cause poverty and identifies those that are potentially amenable to health policy. The review confirms that ill-health is an important contributor to poverty and it finds that the effect through health-related loss of earnings is often larger than that through medical expenses. Both effects are smaller in countries that are closer to universal health coverage and have higher social safety nets. The paper also reviews evidence from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and the United States (US) on the poverty-reduction effectiveness of public health insurance (PubHI) for low-income households. This reveals that PubHI does not always deliver financial protection to its targeted population in LMICs. Countries that have succeeded in achieving this goal often combine extension of coverage with supply-side interventions to build capacity and avoid perverse provider incentives in response to insurance. In the US, PubHI is effective in reducing poverty by shielding low-income households with children from healthcare costs and, consequently, generating long-run improvements in health that increase lifetime earnings. Poverty reduction is a potentially important co-benefit of health systems.

Keywords

Poverty

Health

Health system

Financial protection

Public health insurance

© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V.

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