TY - BOOK AU - Dunlop, David W, ed. AU - Martins, Jo M, ed. ED - Banco Mundial. Instituto de Desarrollo Económico TI - An international assessment of health care financing : : lessons for developing countries T2 - EDI seminar series SN - 0821332538 U1 - 338.433621 PY - 1995/// CY - Washington, D.C. PB - World Bank. Economic Development Institute KW - FINANCIAMIENTO DE LA SALUD KW - SISTEMA DE SALUD KW - PAISES EN DESARROLLO KW - TERCER MUNDO N1 - Incluye bibliografía; Foreword -- Contributors -- Pt. 1: The conceptual framework: 1. Introduction / David W. Dunlop and Jo. M. Martins -- 2. A framework for assessing health financing strategies and the role of health insurance / William C. Hsiao -- Pt. 2: Country case studies: Asia: 3. Tha japanese health care system: a stepwise approach to universal coverage / Naoki Ikegami and Toshihiko Hasegawa -- 4. Issues in health care delivery: the case of Korea / Bong-min Yang -- North America: 5. The canadian health care system: where are we and how did we get here? / Robert G. Evans and Maureen M. Law -- 6. The health system of the United States: lessons for other countries / Uwe E. Reinhardt -- Europe: 7. Assessing the experience of health financing in the United Kingdom / Brian Abel-Smith -- 8. Germany's health care and health insurance system / Uwe E. Reinhardt -- Pt. 3: Lessons of experience: 9. Lessons learned / Jo. M. Martins and David W. Dunlop N2 - In the past decade, the countries of Southeast Asia and other regions have made siginificant progress on the health care front. Thanks to a substantial expansion in the provision of health care as a result of rapid economic development, infant and maternal mortality has fallen, life expectancy has increased, total fertility rates are down, and population growth has declined. That expansion is particularly evident in the greater numbers of physicians and nurses per thousand population and in the growing share of total health expenditures in gross domestic product. ALthough health status in the region could be improved even further - through the extension of primary health care to still disenfranchised groups and an effort to reduce the use of tobacco products - it is clear that much has been and will continue to be accomplished in both preventive and curative health care. Perhaps the greates problem countries have experienced thus far lies in financing the costs of such care. To address this problem, many countries have moved to implement various forms of cost recovery. Because of equity considerations, health insurance is one option that is receiving particularly close attention. This volume opens with a discussion of the important role of health insurance at this time in developing countries. Attention is also given to the macroeconomic context in which health financing takes place in developing countries, the growth of the health sector as development progresses, and the linkages between health financing, health status, and indicators of development. Other chapters are devoted to health financing and the use of health insurance in a set of six countries. Their experience provides public policy officials in other countries with considerable insight into the fundamental ingredients of an effective health financing strategy ER -