Table 1.
Major pro–poor policies and initiatives in Ethiopia
| Pro–poor initiatives | Year implemented | Objective | Key outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Introduction of Health Extension Program |
2003 |
To achieve universal primary health care coverage which mainly benefits low–income households |
More than 38 000 health extension workers have been deployed in 16 500 villages of the country; and universal primary health care coverage has been achieved. |
| Establishment of Pharmaceuticals Fund and Supply Agency |
2006 |
To ensure accessibility and affordability of essential medicines and laboratory investigations |
Medicines and laboratory investigations for key health conditions have been provided free of charge; out–of–pocket expenditures have reduced; health services utilization has improved; and health MDG targets have been met. |
| Health Development Army Program with community soolidarity fuding |
2012 |
To disseminate health information and facilitate uptake of critical health services and finance priority challenges identified by the community |
Procured more than 200 ambulance vehicles for medical referral; constructed health posts and maternity waiting homes at rural health centers; and Health Development Armies have actively involved in health facility governance to improve the quality of health services. |
| Scaling up Community–based Health Insurance scheme |
2015 |
To provide quality health care without financial hardship to the poor in informal sector |
By the end of 2016, 50% of citizens in informal sector are expected to be covered. |
| Implementation of Social Health Insurance scheme | 2016 | To deliver quality health care and ensure financial protection to citizens employed in formal sector and achieve universal health coverage | All employees of formal sector are expected to be covered by the end of 2016. |