TOKYO – Ensuring
greater access to affordable health care is a crucial factor in alleviating
poverty and promoting economic growth, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said
Friday in announcing ambitious targets for preventing and treating chronic
illnesses in developing countries.
About 100 million people are impoverished by medical
expenses each year. The World Bank and World Health Organization aim by 2020 to
reduce that figure by half and by 2030 to eliminate it altogether.
The consensus among many familiar with development and
poverty alleviation is that providing universal health coverage is vital for
economic development, said officials attending a conference in Tokyo.
Japan, which extended such coverage to its entire
population in 1961, benefited enormously from that investment, as strong public
health supported the expansion of a highly productive middle class, Kim said.
“The fact is that Japan committed to universal health
coverage when its per capita income was not at the highest levels and many
people thought it could not afford it,” Kim said.
The World Bank and WHO also intend to double access to
affordable basic services such as vaccinations and deliveries to 80 percent of
the poor in developing countries by 2020. By 2030 that number should also be
able to get treatment for injuries and for such chronic problems as high blood
pressure, diabetes and mental illness.
Improved public health also requires investments in
education, welfare, transport, water and sanitation.
“Universal health coverage is financially feasible and
makes good economic sense,” said WHO director general Margaret Chan. “It is the
ultimate expression of fairness. People are not left behind to die,” she said.
Source: AP News
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