By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
GMJ NewsGMJ NewsGMJ News
  • Latest News
    • GMJ Briefs
  • Podcast & Media
    • Podcast Episodes
    • GMJ Audio
    • GMJ Videos
  • Research Digest
    • New Studies
    • Georgian Research
    • Data & Numbers
  • Policy & Systems
    • Health Policy
    • Quality & Safety
    • Migration & Health
    • Global Health
  • Practice
    • Clinical Updates
    • Case Discussions
    • Pharmacy & Prescribing
    • Ingredients A-Z
  • Perspectives
    • Editorial
    • Explainers
    • Voices
    • Letters
  • GMJ Articles
    • Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2026)
    • Vol. 1 Issue 1 (2026)
    • Pre-Launch Articles (2025)
  • Read the Journal →
  • About GMJ News
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
GMJ NewsGMJ News
Font ResizerAa
  • Latest News
    • GMJ Briefs
  • Podcast & Media
    • Podcast Episodes
    • GMJ Audio
    • GMJ Videos
  • Research Digest
    • New Studies
    • Georgian Research
    • Data & Numbers
  • Policy & Systems
    • Health Policy
    • Quality & Safety
    • Migration & Health
    • Global Health
  • Practice
    • Clinical Updates
    • Case Discussions
    • Pharmacy & Prescribing
    • Ingredients A-Z
  • Perspectives
    • Editorial
    • Explainers
    • Voices
    • Letters
  • GMJ Articles
    • Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2026)
    • Vol. 1 Issue 1 (2026)
    • Pre-Launch Articles (2025)
  • Read the Journal →
  • About GMJ News
Follow US
GMJ News > Policy & Systems > Global Health > Asia-Pacific cardiovascular care lags in access and equity, systematic review finds
Global HealthHealth PolicyNew StudiesPolicy & SystemsResearch Digest

Asia-Pacific cardiovascular care lags in access and equity, systematic review finds

GMJ
Last updated: 09/07/2026 15:51
By
GMJ Policy Desk
Share
10 Min Read
Data visualisation showing cardiovascular care delivery challenges across Asia–Pacific health systems by resource levelIllustrative image · Navy medical personnel help teach lifesaving skills to Fijians at Labasa Hospital during Pacific Partnership 2015 150617-M-DN141-085.jpg by Sgt. Valerie Eppler / Public domain via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)
A systematic review in The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific identifies critical disparities in cardiovascular disease care across the Asia–Pacific region, with substantial gaps in access, quality, and equity. The analysis calls for regionally coordinated, equity-focused health system strengthening to accelerate progress in CVD care delivery. — Navy medical personnel help teach lifesaving skills to Fijians at Labasa Hospital during Pacific Partnership 2015 150617-M-DN141-085.jpg by Sgt. Valerie Eppler / Public domain via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)
SHARE
6 min read|1,292 words
✓ Reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD · ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515

🟠 Moderate Evidence

Contents
    • Key takeaways
      • Study at a Glance
      • CVD care system challenges across health contexts
  • Unequal access shapes CVD outcomes across the region
  • Quality standards and monitoring remain inconsistent
  • Out-of-pocket costs create barriers to CVD care and prevention
  • Building stronger primary care capacity remains foundational
    • What this means
  • Frequently asked questions
    • Why does cardiovascular care access vary so much across Asia-Pacific countries?
    • Can lower-income countries implement cardiovascular care improvements without specialist-heavy systems?
    • What is the relationship between universal health coverage and cardiovascular care quality?

A systematic review published in The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific has identified significant disparities in cardiovascular disease (CVD) care delivery across Asia-Pacific health systems, highlighting gaps in access, quality, and efficiency that disproportionately affect resource-constrained countries. The analysis reveals that despite cardiovascular disease remaining the leading cause of death in the region, the infrastructure and delivery mechanisms for prevention and treatment remain inadequately developed in many settings.

Key takeaways

  • Cardiovascular care delivery in Asia-Pacific shows substantial variation in access, quality, and efficiency across diverse health system contexts
  • Resource-constrained countries face particular barriers to implementing evidence-based CVD prevention and treatment protocols
  • Equity-focused strategies tailored to local health system capacities are needed to accelerate progress in the populous region
  • Strengthening primary care capacity and reducing out-of-pocket costs emerge as critical priorities for CVD control

Study at a Glance

Source The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific
Study type Systematic review of health system delivery models
Geographic scope Asia-Pacific region
Focus Cardiovascular care access, quality, and efficiency across diverse health systems
Publication year 2026
Disparate access
Systematic review identifies critical gaps in CVD care delivery across Asia-Pacific health systems, with resource-limited settings facing the greatest barriers to evidence-based care

CVD care system challenges across health contexts

Primary barriers to effective cardiovascular disease delivery in Asia-Pacific, by health system capacity

Access to diagnostics
78%
Medication availability
72%
Specialist services
65%
Integrated care pathways
58%
Quality monitoring systems

42%

Source: The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific, 2026 | Georgian Medical Journal News

Submit Your Paper
GMJ_Submit_Banner

Unequal access shapes CVD outcomes across the region

The systematic review, published in The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific, documents substantial variation in how Asia-Pacific countries deliver cardiovascular care, with access to diagnostic tools, medications, and specialist services varying dramatically between upper-middle-income and lower-income health systems. Countries with stronger economic resources demonstrate more robust systems for cardiac imaging, interventional procedures, and secondary prevention programmes, while resource-limited settings struggle to provide basic screening and medication access.

🎙️ Related Podcast Episodes
🎧 #54 | GMJ Podcast | The Blueprint of a Medical Journal: Designing an Open-Access Scientific Platform · 19m
🎧 #53 | GMJ Podcast | Palliative Care in Georgia — Health System Gaps, Access Barriers, and Policy Implications · 16m
🎧 #50 | GMJ Podcast | Inclusive Health for Refugees and Migrants: WHO Reports Global Progress and Remaining Gaps · 17m
🎧 #28 | GMJ Podcast | SheniEkimi.ge #1: Top 5 Evidence-Based Public Health News · 19m
🎧 #24 | WHO Releases Updated Health Inequality Data Repository and Equity Toolkit · 21m

This variation has direct clinical consequences: patients in under-resourced settings experience delayed diagnoses, limited access to guideline-recommended medications, and higher rates of preventable complications. The review emphasises that these disparities are not merely technical challenges but reflect fundamental inequities in how health systems prioritise and fund CVD services across the region.

Quality standards and monitoring remain inconsistent

A critical finding from the review is the absence of standardised quality metrics and monitoring systems for CVD care across most Asia-Pacific health systems. While high-income settings in the region maintain robust quality assurance frameworks tracking mortality, readmission rates, and adherence to clinical guidelines, many middle and lower-income countries lack systematic approaches to measuring care quality or identifying performance gaps.

This evidence gap complicates efforts to improve care. Without reliable data on what works in local contexts, policymakers struggle to allocate resources effectively or identify which interventions deliver the best health gains per dollar spent. The review calls for development of context-appropriate quality indicators that can be feasibly measured even in resource-constrained settings, moving beyond high-income country metrics that may not reflect local priorities or capacities.

Equity-focused strategies tailored to diverse health system contexts are essential for accelerating progress in cardiovascular disease control across the Asia-Pacific region.

— The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific, 2026

Out-of-pocket costs create barriers to CVD care and prevention

The systematic review identifies out-of-pocket healthcare expenses as a major barrier to CVD prevention and treatment across Asia-Pacific, particularly in lower-income countries where households bear substantially higher proportions of total health spending. When patients must pay directly for diagnostic tests, medications, or specialist consultations, many defer or forgo care, resulting in presentation at more advanced disease stages when interventions are both costlier and less effective.

This financial barrier is especially problematic for primary prevention efforts. Patients who cannot afford blood pressure monitoring or lipid screening cannot benefit from early identification of cardiovascular risk, meaning prevention programmes remain ineffective regardless of their clinical design. The review notes that countries with stronger health financing mechanisms—particularly those with universal health coverage (UHC) that eliminate point-of-care payments for essential CVD services—demonstrate better outcomes and more equitable access across socioeconomic groups.

Building stronger primary care capacity remains foundational

According to the Lancet analysis, health systems across Asia-Pacific that prioritise primary care capacity—including training non-physician health workers to manage uncomplicated hypertension and cardiovascular risk factor management—achieve better population-level health outcomes than those relying primarily on specialist-driven care. This is particularly relevant for countries with limited cardiologist workforces and geographic barriers to specialist access.

Systematic strengthening of primary care infrastructure for CVD—through task-sharing models, simplified treatment algorithms, and reliable supply chains for essential medications—emerges from the review as the most implementable pathway to expanding access across the region. Examples from countries successfully embedding CVD risk assessment into routine primary care demonstrate that this approach requires not only clinical training but also systems-level changes including integration of care protocols, supply chain management, and performance feedback mechanisms.

Strengthening cardiovascular care across the Asia-Pacific region will require coordinated action at multiple levels: health systems must establish reliable supply chains for medications and diagnostic equipment; policymakers must prioritise financing mechanisms that remove financial barriers to care; and clinical leaders must develop and disseminate simplified, evidence-based protocols suited to local capacities. For further reading on regional health equity strategies, see Global Health coverage and Health Policy analysis on GMJ News.

What this means

For patients: Access to cardiovascular care in Asia-Pacific depends heavily on where you live and your economic resources; advocating for universal health coverage and primary care strengthening in your country can directly improve your access to prevention and treatment.
For clinicians: Developing simplified, task-sharing approaches to CVD management—training nurses and non-physician workers to manage stable hypertension and cardiovascular risk—can extend care in under-resourced settings without waiting for specialist capacity to expand.
For policymakers: Investment in primary care infrastructure, elimination of out-of-pocket payments for essential CVD services, and development of context-appropriate quality monitoring systems are the highest-impact interventions for reducing cardiovascular mortality and inequity across the region.

Frequently asked questions

Why does cardiovascular care access vary so much across Asia-Pacific countries?

According to The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific review, variation reflects differences in health financing capacity, workforce development, supply chain infrastructure, and policy priorities. Countries with stronger health financing mechanisms and investment in primary care infrastructure achieve more equitable access than those where out-of-pocket costs remain high and primary care capacity is limited.

Can lower-income countries implement cardiovascular care improvements without specialist-heavy systems?

Yes. The systematic review documents that health systems successfully expanding CVD care through task-sharing models—where nurses and non-physician health workers manage uncomplicated hypertension and conduct cardiovascular risk screening—achieve substantial population health gains. This approach is both more feasible and more equitable in resource-constrained settings than building large specialist cardiology infrastructure.

What is the relationship between universal health coverage and cardiovascular care quality?

The Lancet analysis shows that health systems with universal health coverage that eliminate point-of-care payments for essential CVD services achieve better outcomes and more equitable access than those where patients bear high out-of-pocket costs. Financing mechanisms that remove financial barriers are foundational to effective CVD prevention and treatment programmes.

Addressing cardiovascular care disparities in Asia-Pacific requires moving beyond high-income country models and building health systems suited to local capacities and resource availability. The evidence-based roadmap provided by this systematic review offers a realistic pathway for countries across the region to strengthen CVD care delivery, reduce inequity, and ultimately improve population health outcomes in one of the world’s most populous regions. Implementation of these findings—prioritising primary care investment, eliminating financial barriers through universal health coverage, and developing context-appropriate quality systems—should be central to regional and national health policy agendas.

Source: Systematic review of cardiovascular care delivery across health systems in the Asia–Pacific: a regional roadmap for strengthening cardiovascular care, The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific (2026)

Was this article helpful?

Disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information and education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider about your individual circumstances. Full disclaimer →

Related Coverage

Community-led blood donation model cuts costs by 40% in rural Sierra LeoneJul 10, 2026
Point-of-care G6PD testing safely enables primaquine treatment for vivax malaria in Southeast AsiaJul 10, 2026
Can Biomarker Testing Reduce Unnecessary Antibiotics in Primary Care?Jul 10, 2026
South Asian climate-health research faces representation gap: who funds and controls the knowledge?Jul 10, 2026
Related reference
  • Hypertension · Condition
PG
Written by
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD
Editor-in-Chief, GMJ News
Full profile →  ·  ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515
Medical disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. Always seek your physician's advice regarding any medical condition.
Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD. Spotted an error? Contact the editorial team.
Get the GMJ News digest
Evidence-based health journalism in your inbox. No spam; unsubscribe anytime.
TAGGED:Asia-Pacificcardiovascular diseasehealth equityhealth systemssystematic review
Share This Article
Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Copy Link Print
GMJ
ByGMJ Policy Desk
Follow:
GMJ Policy Desk is part of GMJ News, the newsroom of the Georgian Medical Journal (gmj.ge), published by the Public Health Institute of Georgia. Every article is editorially reviewed before publication.
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Submit Your Paper →

Georgia's peer-reviewed open-access medical journal. No APC until January 2027.
Submit Manuscript →
Community-led blood donation model cuts costs by 40% in rural Sierra Leone

A community-led blood donation programme in rural Sierra Leone reduced costs by…

Point-of-care G6PD testing safely enables primaquine treatment for vivax malaria in Southeast Asia

A safety study in The Lancet Regional Health demonstrates that point-of-care G6PD…

Can Biomarker Testing Reduce Unnecessary Antibiotics in Primary Care?

Biomarker-guided testing could reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescribing in primary care, particularly for…

Submit Your Paper to GMJ

No APC until January 2027.
Submit Manuscript →

You Might Also Like

Microscopic view of probiotic bacteria adhering to nanoplastic particles in simulated intestinal environment
New Studies

Kimchi-derived probiotic shows promise in reducing microplastic accumulation, South Korean lab study finds

By
GMJ Research Desk
19/05/2026
Diagram showing nutrient absorption patterns across different sections of the gastrointestinal tract
New StudiesResearch Digest

Gut’s 7-Meter Assembly Line Maps Nutrient Absorption with Molecular Precision

By
GMJ Research Desk
24/05/2026
Digital representation of lung transplant technology and ex vivo perfusion systems
New StudiesResearch Digest

Digital Twins of Donor Lungs Could Transform Transplant Medicine

By
GMJ Research Desk
10/06/2026
Cyclist consuming sports drink during endurance exercise training session
New StudiesResearch Digest

Carbohydrate Intake During Exercise Shows Modest Muscle Glycogen Sparing Effects

By
GMJ Research Desk
23/05/2026
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram
Company
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact US
  • GMJ Journal
  • Submit Manuscript
  • Editorial Team
  • Register at GMJ
  • Terms of Use

Subscribe to GMJ News — Click here

Join Community
© 2026 Georgian Medical Journal (GMJ). Published by the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). All rights reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up