Title: Achieving Universal Coverage: Thailand experiences
1Achieving Universal Coverage Thailand
experiences
- Viroj Tangcharoensathien MD. Ph.D.
- IHPP-Thailand
- General Health Insurance in Financing of Health
Services - in Turkey and Restructuring of the MOH,
- Istanbul,
- 31 March - 1 April 2006
2Outline
- Thailand experiences on gradual extension of
health insurance coverage until reaching
Universal Coverage for the whole population - Key context of reform
- Current and future challenges
- Radical changes to the Ministry of Public Health
3International experiences speed of transition
towards Universal Coverage
Source WHO 2004
4Taking-off major social protection schemes,
Thailand
- 1975 Social Welfare Scheme
- For the poor, then to cover the elderly and
children lt12 years - General tax funded scheme
- 1978 Civil Servant Medical Benefit Scheme
(CSMBS) for public sector employee - Government employee and retirees, plus their
dependents (parents, spouse, three children
lt18years) - General tax funded scheme
- 1974 Mandatory Social Health Insurance for
private sector employee - 1974 Workmen Compensation scheme -- employer
financed scheme - 1990 Social Health Insurance scheme financed
by equal contributions from 3 parties the
employer, employee and government. - Voluntary health insurances
- 1983 Voluntary Health Card Scheme
- Flat rate premium by household government
subsidy
5Milestones Social Welfare Scheme
- 1975
- Free care for Low Income Household, through fee
exemption upon hospital discretions - 1981
- Formal scheme established, covered 11 million
(23 total), income testing needed before cards
issued. Government budget allocation to the
Scheme but usually under-funded. - 1992
- Expansion to cover the elderly, gt60 years.
- 1994
- Expansion to social disadvantage group, and
children lt12 yr. - 1998
- Capitation based budget high cost reimbursement
schedule
6Milestones CSMBS
- 1978
- Decree entitle government employee and dependants
free medical care - 1992
- Health Systems Research Institute research
towards reforms - 1997-98
- Economic crisis
- Interim measure introduction of co payment,
while maintain fee for services - 2002 - 2003
- Electronic claim for IP using case base (DRG),
resistance to set up global budget - 2004
- No significant reform actions taken
- Fee for service results in cost escalation
-
7Milestones Social Health Insurance
- 1954
- The first Social Security Act promulgated, but no
implementation for political reasons - 1974
- Implement Workmen Compensation Scheme, 7 years
phasing in throughout the country, - Employer pays the scheme for work related
injuries and death - 1990
- Social Security Act 1990, enforced in gt20
employee, - Capitation low cost contract model
- 1993
- Expansion to cover gt10 employee
- 2002
- Expansion to cover gt1 employee, though large
proportion of small firms not comply to the law
8Milestones Voluntary Health Card Scheme
- 1983 Phase I community financing for MCH
services - 1984 Phase II community financing for family
health services - 1991 Phase III full scale voluntary health
insurance - 1994 Phase IV 50 government subsidy,
reinsurance for high cost and cross boundary
services
9Insurance coverage profile, 2000various source
estimations
Significant proportion of uninsured with a poor
potential increase of insurance coverage by other
schemes.
10Concluding remarks
- Lessons on strategies
- 1975- Targeting the poor, draw lessons, gradual
extension to others (the elderly, children lt12) - 1983- Voluntary Health Card Scheme seen as
transitional measures, build up social capital
and institutional capacity to manage insurance
fund. - 1990- Introduce Social Health Insurance using
capitation, this is the predecessor of current
Universal Coverage system design, - 1992- Reform of Civil Servant Medical Benefit
Scheme aims to contain cost, but not
successful, strong resistance. - 2001- strong political will to adopt
universality
11A long march towards UC
- Really a long march,
- 27 years of gradual coverage extension to formal
and informal sector, since a pro-poor financing
policy in 1975, Thailand achieved Universal
Coverage (UC) for the whole population completely
by April 2002. - By early 2002, only three public insurance scheme
covers the whole population - Social Health Insurance for private sector
employee - Civil Servant Medical Benefit Scheme for
government employee and dependants - The UC Scheme for the rest of population
- The design of UC scheme applies the model of
Social Health Insurance - This ensure harmonization with the existing
scheme, close down the gap.
12Platforms for reform towards UC
- Context window of opportunity opens January
2001 General Electionuniversal coverage is a
major campaign - National capacity to generate evidence and
identify problems warrant reforms - Contributions by WHO since 1995
- National Health Account
- Inefficiency and cost escalation in Civil Servant
Medical Benefit Scheme under Fee For Service - Fragmentation and inadequate social protection
- Bridging of research community and politicians by
reformists, hence evidence based reform. - Prior experience of capitation contract model
from Social Health Insurance Scheme since 1991 - Cost containment merits
- Programmatic feasible, social acceptability, good
quality and utilization - Health systems capacity to manage changes during
the transition
13Outcome of UC Scheme
- UC Schemes covers the poor, half belongs to Q1
and Q2 (the poorest 40 of the population) - Significant increase in utilization more on OP
than IP - The Scheme is not adequately funded in view of
high utilization - Empirical evidence indicates
- Pro-poor budget subsidy,
- District health system is a major hub of
fostering the pro-poor nature of financing
healthcare - Significant relief of household expenses on
health - Very small percent of impoverishment due to
medical expenses. - Long term 20 year forecast of resource needs for
UC scheme, is within fiscal capacity of the
government.
14Current and future challenges
- Major changes in the Ministry of Public Health
(MOPH) role and function - From inclusive financier and healthcare provision
to healthcare provision only - The purchasing role was transferred to National
Health Security Office (purchaser provider split)
- In view of decentralization Act, healthcare
delivery systems would be - either become autonomous with its governing board
or under the local government - MOPH has lost its financing role and will
eventually lose the provision function a major
change - Needs for revisit MOPH role
- Stewardship function needs to improve
- Standard setting, rules, law and enforcement
- More steering and less rowing
- Evidence based reform is ongoing, do not
under-estimate the strong resistance from the
MOPH.
15Acknowledgments
- National partners
- Thailand Research Fund for institutional grants
to the International Health Policy Program (IHPP)
- National Statistics Office (NSO) for national
household surveys - National Health Security Office (NHSO) and other
partners who initiate, design and steer the UC
scheme - MOPH as major healthcare providers