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      Priority setting for health interventions in Mexico's System of Social Protection in Health.

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          Abstract

          Explicit priority setting presents Mexico with the opportunity to match the pressure and complexity of an advancing epidemiological transition with evidence-based policies driven by a fundamental concern for how to make the best use of scarce resources to improve population health. The Mexican priority-setting experience describes how standardised analytical approaches to decision making, mainly burden of disease and cost-effectiveness analyses, combine with other criteria--eg, being responsive to the legitimate non-health expectations of patients and ensuring fair financing across households--to design and implement a set of three differentiated health intervention packages. This process is a key element of a wider set of reform components aimed at extending health insurance, especially to the poor. The most relevant policy implications include lessons on the use of available and proven analytical tools to set national health priorities, the usefulness of priority-setting results to guide long-term capacity development, the importance of favouring an institutionalised approach to cost-effectiveness analysis, and the need for local technical capacity strengthening as an essential step to balance health-maximising arguments and other non-health criteria in a transparent and systematic process.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Lancet
          Lancet (London, England)
          Elsevier BV
          1474-547X
          0140-6736
          Nov 04 2006
          : 368
          : 9547
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Mexican Ministry of Health, Mexico City, Mexico. epier@salud.gob.mx
          Article
          S0140-6736(06)69567-6
          10.1016/S0140-6736(06)69567-6
          17084761
          a4d2159e-149d-45c4-b0ea-a69f80ef0ea4
          History

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