How Access to Knowledge Can Help Universal Health Coverage Become a Reality

A critical part of attaining universal health coverage  especially in developing countries  is unfettered access to published medical research.

For many low and middle income countries, open access to published medical research comes with barriers as a result of infrastructural challenges. Credit: Reuters

The World Health Organisation’s director-general Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus has set universal health coverage as one of the main priorities for his term.

Universal health coverage is defined by the WHO as free access to promotive, preventive, curative and rehabilitative health services. These have to be of a sufficient quality to be effective but without causing unnecessary financial hardship when paying for the services.

But Ghebreyesus’s goal is a challenging one, especially for low and middle income countries which make up around 84% of the world’s population. Yet they only have access to half the physicians and a quarter of the nurses that high income countries have access to.

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Similarly low and middle income countries only spend around US $266 per capita on healthcare. In contrast, high income countries spend a whopping US $5,251 per capita.

This means that attaining universal health coverage in poorer settings is challenging to say the least. Large cuts to foreign aid investment from a number of high income economies only compound this challenge.

To address this, affected countries need to start thinking smarter, and not simply work harder. Optimising available resources requires local researchers to apply themselves. In other words, these countries need to grow their knowledge economies.

High income countries already have access to significant resources. This is mainly due to their own knowledge economies flourishing. To match this low and middle income countries need to increase the investment in their research activity. This includes increasing the number of institutions and supervisors that support research.

Although low and middle income countries have seen an increase and improvement in all these areas, access to existing knowledge remains poor. Particularly when compared to access in higher income countries.

The ideal knowledge economy

A healthy knowledge economy needs: