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Healthcare list

1. Family planning services. 2. Children 0-5 years of age Child care 3. Services for pregnant mothers4. Maternal service 5. Reproductive Health Services6. Immunization program 7. General patient care 8. Health Education Services - All women, old, old, young and children coming to the health center are provided with necessary health services.* ORS is provided for diarrhea patients.* Maternity patients coming to the hospital are given necessary advice including antenatal checkup and iron tablets are provided. * Under National Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control Program sputum collection is done for expectoration of TB patients and free medicine is provided to Tuberculosis leprosy patients.* Immunization is given to children and women under EPI program * Health, nutrition and reproductive health of patients coming to sub health centers Education is given *Reproductive health and family planning programs are conducted among adolescents and married couples coming to sub-health centers.* Patients are referred to upazila hospitals if necessary. can be contacted easily.* Required number of notice boards are placed in the sub-health centers in a visible place. Necessary information is written on the notice boards.* Medicines subject to supply are provided free of cost from the service center. However, for the medical needs, the service recipient may have to purchase some medicine from outside the center. * The list of stocked medicines, the list of services provided, the list of doctors providing services are drawn on the board. Universal coverage, or universal service, sometimes referred to as universal health coverage, is usually a health care system that provides health care and financial protection for all citizens of a country. It is organized with the ultimate goal of creating financial benefits, better health benefits and better health for all members of a society with specific recommendations[2]. Universal health care is not the same system for the benefit of all or implicitly for the protection of all. Universal health care can be defined by three critical dimensions: who is covered, what benefits are covered, and what costs are covered[2]. It is defined by the World Health Organization as a situation where citizens can access health benefits without being free of financial insecurity[3]. Health is of central importance in policy frameworks. Thus, it is essential to recognize "healthy public policy" (health in all policies) as the highest policy framework for the development of global health systems, which includes public health, primary health care, and civil services across the spectrum of health and health-related services from primary care to long-term care and terminal care. Condition requires inclusion. While this perspective is both reasonable and well-founded in socioecological ideals, in most cases the reality is different, and there is room for exaggeration everywhere.