November-December. 2025 | The HEALTH
G LOBAL HEALTH
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difficulty accessing essential health services. The gap between women in the richest and poorest quintiles narrowed slightly, from about 38 to 33 percentage points over the past decade.
Even in high-performing regions such as Europe, vulnerable groups – including the poorest and people with disabilities – continue to report higher unmet health needs.
These findings likely underestimate the true extent of health inequalities, as the most vulnerable groups – such as displaced populations and people living in informal settlements – are often missing in data sources used to monitor progress toward UHC.
invest in their health systems, to protect the health of their people and economies. WHO is supporting them to do that."
Financial hardship in health is defined as a household spending more than 40 per cent of its discretionary budget on OOP health expenses. Cost of medicines is a major driver of financial hardship: in three-quarters of countries with available data, medicines account for at least 55 per cent of people ' s OOP health expenses.
The burden is even greater among people living in poverty who allocate a median of 60 per cent of their OOP health expenses on medicines, diverting their scarce resources from other essential needs.
While the burden of OOP health costs falls mostly on poorer people, it also affects betteroff segments of the population that allocate a large share of their budgets to health expenses, particularly in middle-income countries where this group of people is growing.
Without faster progress, full-service coverage without financial hardship will remain out of reach for many: the global SCI is projected to reach only 74 out of 100 by 2030, with nearly 1 in 4 people worldwide still facing financial hardship at the end of the Sustainable Development Goals( SDG) era.
ENCOURAGING PROGRESS
Despite positive direction, the global progress rate has slowed since 2015, with only one-third of countries improving in both increasing health coverage and reducing financial hardship.
All WHO regions have improved service coverage, but only half – Africa, South-East Asia, and the Western Pacific – have also reduced financial hardship. Low-income countries achieved the fastest gains in both areas, but are still facing the most significant gaps.
The global increase in health service coverage has been mainly driven by advances in
infectious disease programmes. Coverage for noncommunicable diseases( NCDs) has shown steady improvement, while gains in reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health have been modest.
The report notes that improved sanitation has supported gains in service coverage. At the same time, inclusive economic growth, rising incomes, and stronger social protection mechanisms have driven poverty reduction, especially in low-income countries, contributing to declines in financial hardship.
However, health costs have increasingly become a source of financial hardship among the poor.
STARK INEQUALITIES
Despite progress, persistent gaps and inequalities are on the rise. In 2022, three out of four people in the poorest segment of the population faced financial hardship from health costs, compared with fewer than 1 in 25 among the richest.
Women, people living in poverty, or in rural areas, or with less education, reported greater
COSTLY CARE: Many families struggle with healthcare costs, as 26 per cent of people experience financial hardship due to out-of-pocket expenses
" Now is the time for countries to invest in their health systems, to protect the health of their people and economies. WHO is supporting them to do that."
AT-RISKS GROUPS: Women, rural residents, and the less educated struggle to access essential health services amid rising disparities
ACTIONS LEADING TO 2030
Achieving the UHC goal by 2030 is central to realising the human right to health. With five years remaining on the SDG agenda, urgent action is now needed to drive progress. The report underscores the critical role of political commitment in every country and community, and calls for action in six core areas: ensure essential health care is free at the point of care for people living in poverty and vulnerable situations; expand public investments in health systems; address high out-of-pocket spending on medicines; accelerate access to essential NCD services, especially as the disease burden rises; strengthen primary health care to promote equity and efficiency; and adopt multisectoral approaches, recognising that determinants of health and UHC drivers extend beyond the health sector.- The HEALTH
EQUAL ACCESS: Every person deserves access to essential health services without financial hardship