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Luxembourg alone ranks as top-tier health system globally, study finds

A comprehensive analysis of 31 countries reveals only Luxembourg achieves high-performance status across health outcomes, financing, and pandemic response—while most nations, including the United States, fall into the low-performance category. The findings offer policymakers a data-driven benchmark for healthcare reform and budget allocation priorities.

Originaltitel: Health systems performance in health outcomes, health financing and COVID-19 pandemic: Lessons from 31 countries

Abstrakt

<p>Background: Health system performance is a multifaceted concept that encompasses various dimensions of a nation's healthcare infrastructure. This study aims to assess and rank the performance of health systems across different regions of the world.</p><p>Methodology: We employed the Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) method in 2023 to evaluate and rank the health system performance of 31 countries across six geographical regions. Our evaluation included six general categories and twelve indicators related to health, finance, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The final weights for these indicators were determined using the Three-scale method and the Entropy-weighting method. Additionally, we categorized health system performance into three groups: high, moderate, and low. Hierarchical clustering of health system performance scores was conducted using SPSS software (version 26).</p><p>Results: Luxembourg emerged as the only high-performing health system, while Qatar and the Netherlands fell into the moderate-performance group. Other countries exhibited low-performing health systems. Notably, within the low-performance group, the United States of America, Australia, Singapore, Canada, England, and Germany achieved relatively better rankings. Conversely, Yemen, Egypt, Afghanistan, and Bolivia ranked lowest in terms of health system performance.</p><p>Conclusion: Contrary to the assumption that higher health spending guarantees improved performance, the experience of COVID-19 among high-income countries revealed mixed results. Strengthening resilience, investing in public health systems, and ensuring sustainable financial resources are crucial for enhancing health system performance.</p>

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