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AIDS Alliance Workshop
Yalta Hotel, Yalta, Crimea, Ukraine
17 July 2007

Presentation made at national workshop in Ukraine to discuss and train national experts in methods related to tracking of HIV/AIDS expenditures.

Our first SLHA policy brief discusses trends in health expenditure in Sri Lanka over past three decades.

This publication presents estimates of health spending in Sri Lanka for 1990–2019 that comply with the System of Health Accounts (SHA) which is the global standard for reporting health expenditures published by the WHO and OECD.

This publication presents revised estimates of health spending in Sri Lanka for 1990–2016 that comply with the System of Health Accounts (SHA) which is the global standard for reporting health expenditures published by the WHO and OECD.

This publication presents the first estimates of Sri Lanka's health expenditure based on the new System of Health Accounts 2011 (SHA 2011), which has been endorsed for international reporting by the WHO, OECD and Eurostat.

This publication presents revised estimates of health spending in Sri Lanka for 1990–2012 that comply with the System of Health Accounts (SHA) which is the global standard for reporting health expenditures published by the OECD.

The findings reveal how healthcare costs, quality, and physical barriers play differing roles in the countries studied in preventing access, and how families are often impoverished by accessing needed care.

This publication presents revised estimates of health spending in Sri Lanka for 1990–2008 that comply with the System of Health Accounts (SHA) which is the global standard for reporting health expenditures published by the OECD.

This publication presents our first major update of health accounts statistics for Sri Lanka since the original Sri Lanka National Health Accounts Report published in 2003 that complies with the System of Health Accounts (SHA) which is the global standard for reporting health expenditures published by the OECD.

Results of the WHO-sponsored pilot study in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka to use health accounts methods to estimate and track spending for child health.