@article{21143, author = {Hayen A. and Wiseman V. and Asante A. and Price J. and Irava W. and Martins J. and Guinness L. and Jan Stephen}, title = {Ten best resources for conducting financing and benefit incidence analysis in resource-poor settings}, abstract = {

Many low- and middle-income countries are seeking to reform their health financing systems to move towards universal coverage. This typically means that financing is based on people's ability to pay while, for service use, benefits are based on the need for health care. Financing incidence analysis (FIA) and benefit incidence analysis (BIA) are two popular tools used to assess equity in health systems financing and service use. FIA studies examine who pays for the health sector and how these contributions are distributed according to socioeconomic status (SES). BIA determines who benefits from health care spending, with recipients ranked by their relative SES. In this article, we identify 10 resources to assist researchers and policy makers seeking to undertake or interpret findings from financing and benefit incidence analyses in the health sector. The article pays particular attention to the data requirements, computations, methodological challenges and country level experiences with these types of analyses.

}, year = {2015}, journal = {Health Policy and Planning}, volume = {30}, edition = {2014/09/27}, pages = {1503-8}, isbn = {1460-2237 (Electronic)
0268-1080 (Linking)}, note = {Wiseman, Virginia
Asante, Augustine
Price, Jennifer
Hayen, Andrew
Irava, Wayne
Martins, Joao
Guinness, Lorna
Jan, Stephen
Health Policy Plan. 2014 Sep 24. pii: czu108.}, language = {Eng}, }