🕌 Middle East

Middle East healthcare

9 countries ranked by quality, costs & life expectancy.

Avg Quality Index 62.6/100
Avg Life Expectancy 77.7 years
Avg Health Spend 5.9% of GDP
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Middle East healthcare ranking 2022

Index scores calculated from WHO, World Bank and OECD data — weighted by life expectancy, universal coverage, cost of GP visit and doctors per 1,000 people.

#CountryIndexLife Exp GP VisitInsurance/moDoctors/1kCoverage
1 Israel 76.7 82.5 yrs $18 $166 3.60 100.0%
2 UAE 70.0 77.8 yrs $92 $184 2.50 100.0%
3 Qatar 69.0 79.4 yrs Free $166 2.80 100.0%
4 Saudi Arabia 66.3 75.8 yrs Free $138 2.80 95.0%
5 Bahrain 65.0 76.8 yrs $28 $120 2.50 100.0%
6 Kuwait 62.7 75.1 yrs Free $110 2.60 100.0%
7 Turkey 60.0 78.2 yrs $18 $55 1.90 85.0%
8 Jordan 53.3 75.8 yrs $23 $60 2.30 75.0%
9 Lebanon 40.0 77.5 yrs $46 $110 2.10 55.0%

Healthcare in Middle East — FAQs

Which Middle East country has the best healthcare?

Israel leads Middle East with the highest healthcare quality index score of 76.7/100 in 2022. The regional average is 62.6/100.

What is the average life expectancy in Middle East?

The average life expectancy across Middle East is 77.7 years. Israel leads at 82.5 years.

How much does healthcare cost in Middle East?

Healthcare costs vary widely in Middle East. Doctor visit costs range from free (public system) to $18 USD. Private insurance averages from $55 to $184 per month. The region spends 5.9% of GDP on healthcare on average.

Do Middle East countries have universal healthcare?

6 out of 9 Middle East countries have near-universal public health coverage (95%+). 3 countries have significant gaps in public coverage.

How does Middle East healthcare compare globally?

The Middle East average healthcare index is 62.6/100 with average life expectancy of 77.7 years. The global average index is approximately 62/100. Middle East is close to the global average.

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