It is currently estimated that 1.3 billion people do not have access to affordable and good quality health care in the world while 56% of the global rural population has no health coverage.
One in three households in South East Asia borrows money or sells assets to pay for health. The WHO suggests that health care expenditure is considered catastrophic whenever it is higher or equal to 40% of the non-subsistence income of a household, in other words, the income available once the basic needs have been covered. Each year, approximately 44 million households, i.e. over 150 million people in the world have to deal with catastrophic expenditure and approximately 25 million homes or over 100 million individuals find themselves in a situation of poverty on account of having to pay for these services.
One in three households in South East Asia borrows money or sells assets to pay for health. The WHO suggests that health care expenditure is considered catastrophic whenever it is higher or equal to 40% of the non-subsistence income of a household, in other words, the income available once the basic needs have been covered. Each year, approximately 44 million households, i.e. over 150 million people in the world have to deal with catastrophic expenditure and approximately 25 million homes or over 100 million individuals find themselves in a situation of poverty on account of having to pay for these services.
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