<p>Access to health care gained the spotlight on national and international development agendas when the 1978 Alma Ata Declaration outlined a strategy for achieving universal access to primary health care by the year 2000 (World Health Organization, 1978). The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set targets for improving health-care delivery by 2015, and the United Nations&rsquo; new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which took effect in January 2016, extend and supplement those with ambitious targets aimed at ensuring healthy lives for all.</p>

<p>Despite significant gains under these initiatives, Africans fully support health care&rsquo;s continued prominence on development agendas: In Afrobarometer surveys across 36 African countries in 2014/2015, citizens rank health as the second-most-important problem (after unemployment) that their governments need to address, as well as the No. 2 priority (after education) requiring additional government investment.</p>

<p>While the proportion of Africans going without needed health care has decreased over the past decade, citizens&rsquo; perceptions highlight some of the challenges that still stand between current reality and &ldquo;health for all,&rdquo; including:</p>

<ul>
<li>in many areas, a continued absence of basic health-care facilities</li>
<li>shortages of needed medical care experienced by almost half of all Africans</li>
<li>widespread difficulties encountered in obtaining care, sometimes compelling patients to pay bribes</li>
<li>poor government performance, according to citizen ratings, in improving basic health services</li>
</ul>

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