Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015

Lessons from Nepal Health Sector Programme (NHSP) 2004-10 Nepal has experienced two decades of steady improvement in health outcomes and impact. Progress accelerated and was accompanied by significant improvements in equality of access during the first NHSP (2004-10). Nepal met or exceeded nearly...

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Main Author: Ministry of Health and Population Government of Nepal
Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/305
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spelling oai:103.69.126.140:123456789-3052022-11-09T05:20:17Z Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015 Ministry of Health and Population Government of Nepal Nepal Health Research Programme Lessons from Nepal Health Sector Programme (NHSP) 2004-10 Nepal has experienced two decades of steady improvement in health outcomes and impact. Progress accelerated and was accompanied by significant improvements in equality of access during the first NHSP (2004-10). Nepal met or exceeded nearly all of the outcome and service output targets that were set for 2004-10, and is on track to meet the child and maternal mortality MDGs. It is estimated that NHSP-1 saved 96,000 deaths and nearly 3.2 million disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) at a cost of $144 per DALY saved. The current plan thus represents a continuation and further refinement of earlier policies and plans that were based on the imp lementat ion of cost-effective, evidence-based health interventions. If the targets of NHSP -2 are broadly achieved by public health spending in line with a “middle case” scenario, this achievement would be broadly maintained, saving a further 45,000 deaths and nearly 1.5 million DALYs at a cost of $147.Expenditure in health remains low at 5.3 percent of GDP and per capita health expenditure at USD 18.09 in 2006. More than 55 percent (USD 9.0) of total health expenditures is financed through out-of-pocket expenditure by households at the time of service. EDPs finance nearly half of Government spending on health, and the substantial gains achieved in reducing child and maternal mortality will not be sustained without continued external support. NHSP-2 examines three scenarios for the future growth in resources available, low, middle and high. All three scenarios adopt the 2010-11 budget ceiling for health that was proposed by the Ministry of Finance in February 2010, but they make different assumptions about absorption and about future growth in resources. 2012-12-27T19:25:33Z 2022-11-08T10:14:18Z 2012-12-27T19:25:33Z 2022-11-08T10:14:18Z 2012-12-27 Technical Report http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/305 en_US application/pdf
institution My University
collection DSpace
language en_US
topic Nepal Health Research Programme
spellingShingle Nepal Health Research Programme
Ministry of Health and Population Government of Nepal
Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015
description Lessons from Nepal Health Sector Programme (NHSP) 2004-10 Nepal has experienced two decades of steady improvement in health outcomes and impact. Progress accelerated and was accompanied by significant improvements in equality of access during the first NHSP (2004-10). Nepal met or exceeded nearly all of the outcome and service output targets that were set for 2004-10, and is on track to meet the child and maternal mortality MDGs. It is estimated that NHSP-1 saved 96,000 deaths and nearly 3.2 million disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) at a cost of $144 per DALY saved. The current plan thus represents a continuation and further refinement of earlier policies and plans that were based on the imp lementat ion of cost-effective, evidence-based health interventions. If the targets of NHSP -2 are broadly achieved by public health spending in line with a “middle case” scenario, this achievement would be broadly maintained, saving a further 45,000 deaths and nearly 1.5 million DALYs at a cost of $147.Expenditure in health remains low at 5.3 percent of GDP and per capita health expenditure at USD 18.09 in 2006. More than 55 percent (USD 9.0) of total health expenditures is financed through out-of-pocket expenditure by households at the time of service. EDPs finance nearly half of Government spending on health, and the substantial gains achieved in reducing child and maternal mortality will not be sustained without continued external support. NHSP-2 examines three scenarios for the future growth in resources available, low, middle and high. All three scenarios adopt the 2010-11 budget ceiling for health that was proposed by the Ministry of Finance in February 2010, but they make different assumptions about absorption and about future growth in resources.
format Technical Report
author Ministry of Health and Population Government of Nepal
author_facet Ministry of Health and Population Government of Nepal
author_sort Ministry of Health and Population Government of Nepal
title Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015
title_short Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015
title_full Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015
title_fullStr Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015
title_full_unstemmed Nepal Health Sector Programme- Implementation Plan III (NHSP -IP 2) 2010 – 2015
title_sort nepal health sector programme- implementation plan iii (nhsp -ip 2) 2010 – 2015
publishDate 2012
url http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/305
work_keys_str_mv AT ministryofhealthandpopulationgovernmentofnepal nepalhealthsectorprogrammeimplementationplaniiinhspip220102015
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