"It has been over twenty years since the Brazilian
Sistema Único de Saúde (Unified Health System or SUS)
was formally established by the 1988 Constitution. The
impetus for the SUS came in part from rising costs and a
crisis in the social security system that preceded the
reforms, but also from a broad-based political movement
calling for democratization and improved social rights.
Building on reforms that started in the 1980s, the SUS
was based on three overarching principles: (i) universal
access to health services, with health defined as a
citizen's right and an obligation of the state; (ii)
equality of access to health care; and (iii) integrality
(comprehensiveness) and continuity of care; along with
several other guiding ideas, including decentralization,
increased participation, and evidence-based
prioritization. The SUS reform established health a
fundamental right and duty of the state, and started a
process of fundamentally transforming Brazil's health
system to achieve this goal. So, what has been achieved
since the SUS was established? And what challenges
remain in achieving the goals that were established in
1988? These questions are the focus of this report.
Specifically, it seeks to assess whether the SUS reforms
have managed to transform the health system as envisaged
more than 20 years ago, and whether the reforms have led
to improved outcomes in terms of access to services,
financial protection, and health status. Any effort to
assess the performance of a health system runs into a
host of challenges concerning the definition of
boundaries of the "health system", the outcomes that the
assessment should focus on, data sources and quality,
and the role of policies and reforms in understanding
how the performance of the health system has changed
over time. Building on an extensive literature on health
system assessment, this report is based on a simple
framework that specifies a set of health system
"building blocks", which affect a number of intermediate
outcomes such as access, quality and efficiency, which,
in turn, contribute to final outcomes, including health
status, financial protection, and satisfaction. Based on
this framework, the report starts by looking at how key
building blocks of Brazil's health system have changed
over time and then moves on to review performance in
terms of intermediate and final outcomes."
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