Proportion of population pushed below the $1.90 ($ 2011 PPP) poverty line by out-of-pocket health care expenditure (%) - Country Ranking - Central America & the Caribbean
Definition: Proportion of population pushed below the $1.90 ($ 2011 PPP) poverty line by out-of-pocket health care expenditure. This indicator shows the fraction of a country's households experiencing impoverishing expenditures, defined as expenditures without which the household would have been above the $ 1.90 poverty line, but because of the expenditures is below the poverty line.
Source: World Health Organization and World Bank. 2019. Global Monitoring Report on Financial Protection in Health 2019.
See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison
Rank | Country | Value | Year |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Haiti | 2.82 | 2013 |
2 | Nicaragua | 2.76 | 2014 |
3 | Guatemala | 0.85 | 2014 |
4 | Jamaica | 0.61 | 2004 |
5 | Trinidad and Tobago | 0.60 | 2014 |
6 | Barbados | 0.34 | 2016 |
7 | St. Lucia | 0.13 | 2016 |
8 | El Salvador | 0.03 | 2014 |
9 | Panama | 0.01 | 2017 |
10 | Costa Rica | 0.00 | 2018 |
11 | Dominican Republic | 0.00 | 2018 |
More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |
Development Relevance: Universal Health Coverage (UHC) is about ensuring that all people can access the health services they need – without facing financial hardship – is key to improving the well-being of a country’s population. UHC is also an investment in human capital and a foundational driver of inclusive and sustainable economic growth and development. UHC is a target associated with the Sustainable Development Goals (target 3.8), and it relates directly to Goal 3 (Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages) and to Goal 1 (End poverty in all its forms everywhere).
Statistical Concept and Methodology: Out-of-pocket payments are those made by people at the time of getting any type of service (preventive, curative, rehabilitative, palliative or long-term care) provided by any type of provider. They include cost-sharing (the part not covered by a third party like an insurer) and informal payments, but they exclude insurance premiums. Out-of-pocket payments exclude any reimbursement by a third party, such as the government, a health insurance fund or a private insurance company. Out-of-pocket payments are impoverishing at the $1.90 PL (PPP) for a household when consumption gross of out-of-pocket payments is higher than the $1.90 PL, but consumption net of out-of-pocket payments is lower than the 1.90 PL.
Aggregation method: Weighted average
Periodicity: Annual