281. Universal Health Coverage for Better Social Protection: The Case of Iraq
- Author:
- Sami Nader
- Publication Date:
- 08-2024
- Content Type:
- Special Report
- Institution:
- Arab Reform Initiative (ARI)
- Abstract:
- Decades of violence, conflict, and humanitarian crises, combined with international sanctions and continuous neglect of the health sector, have seriously harmed Iraq’s healthcare system. As a result, many skilled physicians and other medical practitioners have left the country, causing a shortage of medical staff. Furthermore, Iraqis harbor a great degree of mistrust for the government and the public healthcare system, particularly following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, which exposed and aggravated the multitude of vulnerabilities in public healthcare infrastructure and delivery. Once a prosperous and advanced healthcare system, Iraq has been steadily bleeding out talent, with medical staff and other healthcare practitioners emigrating to find better working conditions abroad; in the same vein, a large number of Iraqis travel to regional neighbors for medical care, including to Lebanon, Iran, Jordan, and Türkiye. Ideally, the state would provide social safety and healthcare as fundamental rights for everyone to guarantee fair access and complete coverage. Yet, Iraq’s healthcare system remains in a state of acute crisis and is characterized by disorganization and poor planning, shortages of staff and resources, fragmentation and insufficient coverage, and pervasive corruption, which instead erode the quality, affordability, and accessibility of basic as well as specialist healthcare services for a majority of Iraqis. The lack of long-term, sustainable health policies is widening inequality between Iraqis; large-scale private healthcare systems, acting as substitutes for the public health system, are spreading at a steady rate throughout the country, creating a “two-tier” healthcare system—in other words, one for those who can afford private healthcare services, and the other for those who cannot. Hence, the current landscape is enabling and widening the gap in health disparities for Iraqis. This paper relies on documentation, reports, and studies, in addition to previous recent experience on the ground in terms of public finance management programs as well as regional finance and public policy. It will map the history of Iraq’s healthcare crisis and the impact of the sanctions on health coverage, as well as the strain imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic on service delivery. The paper will then build a case for a collaborative health insurance scheme as an intermediary response to leverage the strengths of Iraq’s public and private sectors, and most pertinently, to alleviate the immediate healthcare needs of the country’s population. Finally, the paper will articulate policy recommendations towards that end, and for the overall Iraqi healthcare system.
- Topic:
- Health, Public Policy, Health Insurance, and Social Protection
- Political Geography:
- Iraq and Middle East