Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains
The 20th century witnessed a global transformation in human health. Chile's experience illustrates the magnitude of this transformation. By the mid-1990s Chile's per capita income had reached about US$4,000 (adjusted for purchasing power)...
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okr-10986-137182021-04-23T14:03:09Z Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains Jamison, Dean T. ACCIDENTS BIOTECHNOLOGY CHILDHOOD ILLNESSES CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE DIAGNOSTICS DISEASE CONTROL EPIDEMICS EPIDEMIOLOGY EQUIPMENT ETHICS EXTENSION HEALTH AID HEALTH CARE HEALTH EDUCATION HEALTH NEEDS HEALTH POLICY HEALTH PROBLEMS HEALTH RESEARCH HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEPATITIS HEPATITIS B HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN HEALTH IMMUNODEFICIENCY INCOMES INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT INFANT MORTALITY INJURY INNOVATION INTEGRATION INTERVENTION ISOLATION LESSONS LEARNED LIFE EXPECTANCY MALARIA MEDIA MEDICINES MOTIVATION NEW TECHNOLOGIES NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES NUTRITION POLICY POLIO POLIO VACCINE PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROMOTING HEALTH PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPENDING RESEARCH RESEARCH PROJECTS RESOURCE ALLOCATION SANITATION SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE SCIENTISTS SCREENING SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE MANAGEMENT TUBERCULOSIS VACCINES The 20th century witnessed a global transformation in human health. Chile's experience illustrates the magnitude of this transformation. By the mid-1990s Chile's per capita income had reached about US$4,000 (adjusted for purchasing power), and Chilean women had achieved a life expectancy of 79 years. A century ago, in 1900, today's high-income countries also had income levels around $4,000-and, therefore, had resources sufficient to provide their populations with adequate food, water, shelter, and sanitation. Yet, for them, female life expectancy at the time was perhaps 30 years less than it is in Chile today. An important factor has been advance in scientific knowledge and its application both in creating powerful interventions and in guiding behavior. Acquisition and utilization of health research and development or its products becomes, then, an essential function of a country's health system. Much knowledge is embodied in global public goods: once a vaccine for hepatitis B has been developed anywhere it becomes, in some sense, available everywhere. Although monopoly pricing made possible by patents may slow the diffusion of some innovations, the temporary nature of patent-induced monopoly pricing limits this effect. But an innovation's being cheap, powerful, and globally available in no way entails its global use. There indeed appears to be enormous variation in the rate at which different countries make use of knowledge and products that are globally available. This discussion paper presents knowledge as an important function of national health systems. The paper uses the term acquisition rather than purchasing for the most part because of its more general connotation. Most of the issues such as agency roles and organization that are important for resource allocation and purchasing in general are likewise important with respect to research and development. 2013-05-30T19:26:14Z 2013-05-30T19:26:14Z 2004-09 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/09/5624777/purchasing-knowledge-health-gains http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13718 English en_US Nealth, Nutrition and Population (HNP) discussion paper; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ACCIDENTS BIOTECHNOLOGY CHILDHOOD ILLNESSES CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE DIAGNOSTICS DISEASE CONTROL EPIDEMICS EPIDEMIOLOGY EQUIPMENT ETHICS EXTENSION HEALTH AID HEALTH CARE HEALTH EDUCATION HEALTH NEEDS HEALTH POLICY HEALTH PROBLEMS HEALTH RESEARCH HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEPATITIS HEPATITIS B HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN HEALTH IMMUNODEFICIENCY INCOMES INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT INFANT MORTALITY INJURY INNOVATION INTEGRATION INTERVENTION ISOLATION LESSONS LEARNED LIFE EXPECTANCY MALARIA MEDIA MEDICINES MOTIVATION NEW TECHNOLOGIES NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES NUTRITION POLICY POLIO POLIO VACCINE PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROMOTING HEALTH PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPENDING RESEARCH RESEARCH PROJECTS RESOURCE ALLOCATION SANITATION SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE SCIENTISTS SCREENING SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE MANAGEMENT TUBERCULOSIS VACCINES |
spellingShingle |
ACCIDENTS BIOTECHNOLOGY CHILDHOOD ILLNESSES CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE DIAGNOSTICS DISEASE CONTROL EPIDEMICS EPIDEMIOLOGY EQUIPMENT ETHICS EXTENSION HEALTH AID HEALTH CARE HEALTH EDUCATION HEALTH NEEDS HEALTH POLICY HEALTH PROBLEMS HEALTH RESEARCH HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEPATITIS HEPATITIS B HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN HEALTH IMMUNODEFICIENCY INCOMES INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT INFANT MORTALITY INJURY INNOVATION INTEGRATION INTERVENTION ISOLATION LESSONS LEARNED LIFE EXPECTANCY MALARIA MEDIA MEDICINES MOTIVATION NEW TECHNOLOGIES NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES NUTRITION POLICY POLIO POLIO VACCINE PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROMOTING HEALTH PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPENDING RESEARCH RESEARCH PROJECTS RESOURCE ALLOCATION SANITATION SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE SCIENTISTS SCREENING SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE MANAGEMENT TUBERCULOSIS VACCINES Jamison, Dean T. Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains |
relation |
Nealth, Nutrition and Population (HNP)
discussion paper; |
description |
The 20th century witnessed a global
transformation in human health. Chile's experience
illustrates the magnitude of this transformation. By the
mid-1990s Chile's per capita income had reached about
US$4,000 (adjusted for purchasing power), and Chilean women
had achieved a life expectancy of 79 years. A century ago,
in 1900, today's high-income countries also had income
levels around $4,000-and, therefore, had resources
sufficient to provide their populations with adequate food,
water, shelter, and sanitation. Yet, for them, female life
expectancy at the time was perhaps 30 years less than it is
in Chile today. An important factor has been advance in
scientific knowledge and its application both in creating
powerful interventions and in guiding behavior. Acquisition
and utilization of health research and development or its
products becomes, then, an essential function of a
country's health system. Much knowledge is embodied in
global public goods: once a vaccine for hepatitis B has been
developed anywhere it becomes, in some sense, available
everywhere. Although monopoly pricing made possible by
patents may slow the diffusion of some innovations, the
temporary nature of patent-induced monopoly pricing limits
this effect. But an innovation's being cheap, powerful,
and globally available in no way entails its global use.
There indeed appears to be enormous variation in the rate at
which different countries make use of knowledge and products
that are globally available. This discussion paper presents
knowledge as an important function of national health
systems. The paper uses the term acquisition rather than
purchasing for the most part because of its more general
connotation. Most of the issues such as agency roles and
organization that are important for resource allocation and
purchasing in general are likewise important with respect to
research and development. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
Jamison, Dean T. |
author_facet |
Jamison, Dean T. |
author_sort |
Jamison, Dean T. |
title |
Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains |
title_short |
Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains |
title_full |
Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains |
title_fullStr |
Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains |
title_full_unstemmed |
Purchasing of Knowledge for Health Gains |
title_sort |
purchasing of knowledge for health gains |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/09/5624777/purchasing-knowledge-health-gains http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13718 |
_version_ |
1764424211362742272 |