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Delivering Quality Education and Health Care to All

Preparing Regions for Demographic Change

image of Delivering Quality Education and Health Care to All

COVID-19 has put renewed focus on the importance of addressing longstanding challenges that OECD governments face in delivering public services, especially in regions with people spread over a wider area where economies of scale are more difficult to achieve. The physical infrastructure needed to provide good quality education and health services can be more complex and expensive in rural and remote regions that also struggle to attract and retain education and health care professionals. Acute ageing trends in many rural regions and, in some cases, a shrinking population will require sustainable policy responses that will need to be coherent with pressure to drive efficiencies in public spending. This report examines the nuances specific to the delivery of education and health care to people everywhere, offering recommendations on how to better adapt provision to the realities of today and the emerging realities of tomorrow to face the challenges of distance, demographic change and fiscal belt-tightening. The report also examines digital connectivity issues in rural and remote regions, recognising the significant scope for digital delivery of services to mitigate challenges related to distance. Finally, the report looks at governance issues, including fiscal issues, through which the delivery of these critical services is administered and paid for.

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Unleashing the potential of digital services in rural communities

While providing digital services has the potential of overcoming distance barriers, the availability and scope of education and health care digital services is directly affected by lower quality broadband connections in low-density areas. This chapter examines how current digital provision of education and health services can address the challenges of rural areas, while assessing technological and digital barriers to this provision such as the broadband connectivity gaps or the need for digital skills. The chapter also illustrates the advantages and drawbacks of current and emerging broadband technologies. Finally, the chapter sheds light on several strategies deployed by OECD governments in order to improve rural connectivity and expand broadband to low-density rural areas.

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