1. Universal coverage: All people participate, and health care services should be available to all citizens, regardless of age, gender, race, socio-economic status, geographical location, health status, etc. To ensure that no one is excluded from the health care system for economic, geographical and cultural reasons. Comprehensive services, including prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, health promotion, public health intervention, etc. To ensure that individuals can get all kinds of health services they need during their life cycle.
2. Accessibility and fairness: Reasonable layout of health facilities and services, especially in rural and remote areas, to ensure that residents can get services within a reasonable time and distance. Affordable, through reasonable price policy, medical insurance, financial subsidies and other means, to ensure that all people can afford the cost of basic health services, to avoid obstacles to the use of health services caused by economic reasons.
3. Prevention first: disease prevention, giving priority to investment in preventive services, such as immunization, health education, environmental sanitation improvement, prevention and treatment of infectious diseases, etc. , reduce the occurrence of diseases. Health promotion, encouraging healthy lifestyles, such as reasonable diet, moderate exercise, smoking cessation and alcohol restriction, mental health, etc. To improve the health level of the population.
4. Community participation and empowerment: public participation, encouraging community residents, non-governmental organizations and civil organizations to actively participate in health decision-making, service provision and supervision, and enhancing the sense of responsibility and responsiveness of the health system. Health education can improve the public's health literacy through education and information dissemination, so that they can actively safeguard their own and family health and actively participate in health management.