APPLYING HEALTH FINANCING DIAGNOSTICS INDONESIA S EXPERIENCE

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APPLYING HEALTH FINANCING DIAGNOSTICS INDONESIA S EXPERIENCE May 2, 2016

Background Health Status Rate per 1,000 live births 20 40 60 80 0 Indonesia s health status has improved significantly: life expectancy has increased from 45 in 1960 to 71 years in 2013, and it is expected to achieve MDG target on infant mortality The country is facing challenges in Demographic transition : population age 65> is currently around 5% and is projected to double in 2030 and to reach 25% in 2070; Epidemiologic transition : the cause of burden of disease has shifted to NCDs, and the emergence of overnutrition, while maternal mortality and stunting remain persistently high; Inequality : The national average masks regional and income-related wide disparity 1990 2000 2010 2013 Injuries 7% 9% 9% 37% 49% 33% 43% 58% 56% Communicable Non-communicable Source:Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation database 30% 9% 61% Indonesia average East Kalimantan DKI Jakarta Riau DI Yogyakarta South Sulawesi Bangka Belitung West Sumatera Bali Bengkulu South Sumatera East Java Lampung Source: IDHS 2012 West Java West Kalimantan Banten Central Java North Sulawesi Jambi Riau Islands Maluku North Sumatera South Kalimantan East Nusa Tenggara Southeast Sulawesi Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam Central Kalimantan Papua West Nusa Tenggara Central Sulawesi West Sulawesi North Maluku Gorontalo West Papua

1000 200 400 600 800 Background Health Financing 0 OOP spending per capita 200000 300000 400000 500000 600000 Percentage (%) 0 20 40 60 Health Financing Total health spending, and government health spending, remains one of the lowest, despite of its significant increase in the past year Out of pocket spending continues to be the largest share of Total Health Expenditure, around 47% in 2014; about 43% of OOP spending also reported from the uninsured population group; Government spending is around one third of THE and with Government significant increase; more than 60 % spending occurred at the sub national level with complex inter governmental transfer Social health insurance spending : half of the national Government spending but only 7% of OOP spending share of total health expenditure (right axis) total health spending CENTRAL PROVINCE Social health insurance coverage (right axis) DISTRICT OOP spending per capita (left axis) 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013 Year Source: Indonesia COFIS database Note: Data in 2013 constant Rp 1995 2000 2005 2010 2013 Year Source: World Development Indicators database & SUSENAS (various years) Note: OOP spending is in 2013 constant IDR

Social Health Insurance Program for UHC Social Health Insurance Program (JKN) and Health Financing Started in 2014, JKN covers 160 million population and is the largest single payer health insurance system in the world JKN insurance spending per person is USD 27 per year (compare to OOP US$ 50 /person/year; US$ 107/person/year in THE) Challenges Coverage Challenges in targeting non-contributory scheme, with leakage almost half of PBI nonpoor Challenges in covering non-salaried, non-poor workers, currently this group represents ~10% JKN member but much high per person costs due to adverse selection; Benefit Package Comprehensive benefit package with limitations and exclusions Limited service availability leads to implicit rationing Financial protection Despite comprehensive BBP and no cost sharing preliminary results show that OOP remains high

SERVICE AVAILABILITY AND READINESS FOR UHC Service availability has improved greatly but the capacity of health sector to respond to epidemiologic transition and JKN (the National Social Health Insurance) implementation are in questions; An assessment using MOH s 2011 national health facility census was conducted to inform policy dialogue specifically related to the implementation of JKN and health service delivery in general. The assessment was based on WHO s SARA markers adjusted with the National standards. The analysis results were used for the development of the National Strategic Plan 2015 2019, and also for the MOH strategic plan including to strengthen the quality of primary care The results shows in general good results for basic amenity and basic equipment

SERVICE AVAILABILITY AND READINESS FOR UHC General service readiness of puskesmas remains weak across many dimensions and there are wide variations across provinces, with notably lower scores in some of the eastern provinces - Maternal Health emergency services : missing some important element of services, and wide discrepancy of readiness between Papua (42%) and Yogyakarta (72%) Diabetes : deficiency in the capacity of puskesmas to diagnose and monitor diabetes at puskesmas. o o Only 54% of all puskesmas reported the ability to test for blood glucose, and only 47% reported the ability to test urine. Large differences in the diagnostic capacity of urban versus rural puskesmas (urban capacity unsurprisingly was greater) and across provinces

Limitations of Currently Available Information Heavy focus on public sector providers, while the use of private providers continues to be significant especially at primary level, and with JKN implementation private participation is increasing; Existing data sources do not provide answers to why? questions; the findings raise questions on possible factors that explain the disparity of readiness No linkages between supply side readiness and health expenditures which could help explaining issues between funding and service delivery Limited information on health care providers productivity, effort, provider ability, dual-practice Limited information on patient-clients satisfaction, expenditure, access/equity

Addressing limitations through PER PETS QSDS mission control logistics Public Expenditure Tracking Survey (PETS) Public Expenditure Review Health Financing System Assessment (PER - HFSA) Quantitative Service Delivery Survey (QSDS) the front-line PER-HFSA : Levels, trends, allocative, and technical efficiency of public expenditures for health PETS : Quantitative and qualitative deep exploration of health financing flows through district health offices QSDS : Supply-side readiness of public and private primary and maternity care including additional information on: Health workers Patient-client experiences Key added value: linking the issue of health financing with service delivery.

QSDS OBJECTIVE To conduct a comprehensive assessment of supply-side readiness across public and private primary care facilities using the WHO s Service Readiness and Availability Assessment (SARA) conceptual framework, adjusted as per national guidelines To assess provider ability and effort, and provider clinical competences using vignettes To provide a baseline snapshot of financing and supply-side readiness across public and private primary care facilities to enable an assessment of the extent to which BPJS demand-side financing and changes in puskesmas autonomy impact availability and use of funds To identify bottlenecks and inefficiencies related to supply-side gaps in service delivery, and assess provider Focus Areas : MCH, Nutrition, NCDs, e.g. diabetes and hypertension, HIV, TB, Malaria, Immunization

Questionnaires: District Health Office Health Facilities: Puskesmas, Polyclinic/GP practice, Polindes/Poskesdes, Maternity clinic/private midwife practice Healthcare Workers: Including vignettes Patient Exit Survey: Including Discrete Choice Experiments (DCE) Only for DKI Jakarta Posyandu: Including kaders Hospital (HIV and TB)

Questionnaire Focus (District Health Office - DHO) 1. Service availability 2. Health financing Local Government Revenue and Expenditure (2013 2015) : sources of revenue: estimates/allocation and actual revenue from own source revenue, balancing-fund and other transfers, Expenditure : estimated and actual expenditures by economic and functional classification; Health system inputs, activities, and coverage PFM (OECD) District Health Office revenues (2013 2015) Revenues by sources (own sources, SHI-BPJS, Central transfer, and Grants), Expenditures Economic classification (operational personnel and goods and capital) Expenditures by Program including specific programs Expenditures by Providers : Puskesmas and other service units Public and Private partnership 3. Management Capacity

PFM Questions in DOH Module Presentation Title

Questionnaire (Health Facility: Public and private) 1. Staffing 2. Catchment area (for Puskesmas only) 3. Utilization and outcome indicators 4. Service availability 5. Infrastructure readiness 6. Facility financing (mainly for Puskesmas) Puskesmas Revenue 2013 2015 : sources of revenue (including different health insurance schemes), revenue collection and management 7. Programmatic focus: MH, child nutrition, child immunization, child health, HIV/AIDS, STI, TB, Malaria, NCD 8. Medicines and commodities availability 9. Diagnostic capabilities

Thank You