Skip to main content

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 paper published in the Oxford Journals Health Policy and Planning March 2015 issue compares the quality of inpatient clinical care in public and private hospitals in Sri Lanka

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.

The publication by Dr. A.T.P.L. Abeykoon outlines in a nutshell the policies and programmes that influenced the transition from a high population growth rate to a relatively low growth over a period of six decades.

This paper assesses the contribution of mortality decline in Sri Lanka to economically active life during the period 1968 to 2001.

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.

The Sri Lanka case of the World Bank study was carried out by the Institute for Health Policy, and published together with the other country cases in “Good Practices in Health Financing: Lessons from reforms in low- and middle-income countries”.