Presentation to SAMA Conference 2015

Similar documents
Health financing and NHI in South Africa: why do we need a reform?

MEDICAL SCHEMES ACT OF SOUTH AFRICA AMENDMENT BILL, 2018

ZIMBABWE HEALTH FINANCING. GWATI GWATI Health Economist: Planning and Donor Coordination MOHCC Technical team leader National Health Accounts.

Will India Embrace UHC?

Towards a universal health system in South Africa: Proposals, challenges and prospects

Prepared by cde Khwezi Mabasa ( FES Socio-economic Transformation Programme Manager) JANUARY 2016

Commissioner National Planning Commission The Presidency Republic of South Africa.

THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE NHI SCHEME AS A FINANCING SYSTEM FOR UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE

National Treasury. Financing NHI. Pharmaceutical Society SA 24 June 2018

Increasing equity in health service access and financing: Health strategy, policy achievements and new challenges

The Global Economy and Health

Health Care Financing: Looking Towards Kurdistan s Future

Kenya Health Sector Reforms and Roadmap Towards Universal Health Coverage

Prescribed Minimum Benefit compliance and the protection of beneficiaries. Council for Medical Schemes PMB Compliance workshop 11 May 2010

b5 achieving a SHared Goal: free universal HealtH Care In GHana

B5 SOUTH AFRICA: BUILDING OR DESTROYING HEALTH SYSTEMS?

COUNTRY CASE STUDY UNIVERSAL HEALTH INSURANCE IN COSTA RICA. Prepared by: Di McIntyre Health Economics Unit, University of Cape Town

PROJECT INFORMATION DOCUMENT (PID) APPRAISAL STAGE

Health Financing in Africa: More Money for Health or Better Health For the Money?

N I H S at a e e o f Re R a e d a ines e s Joe S e S oloane

Vietnam Health Insurance

Predictive Analytics in the People s Republic of China

CMS view on meaningful risk pooling in pursuit of Universal Health Coverage

Hong He Min-Min Lyu Nari Park May 2, 2012 South Korea Health Care System South Korea formed a Universal Healthcare system in 1977 which is controlled

Benefit Incidence, Financing Incidence and Need of Healthcare Services in South Africa

SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPACT ASSESSMENT SYSTEM (SEIAS) INITIAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT: National Health Insurance Fund JULY 2017

Health Insurance for Poor People in the Province Of Santa Fe, Argentina: The Power of the Clear Model for All

Rwanda. UNICEF/Till Muellenmeister. Health Budget Brief

Universal Health Coverage

Balancing the NHI funding requirements with the economic capacity of South Africa. NHI Colloquium 1 June 2016 Presenter: Dondo Mogajane

Health Plan Benefits and Coverage Matrix

ADDRESSING PUBLIC PRIVATE SECTOR INEQUALITIES PROFESSOR EMERITUS YOSUF VERIAVA

The Estonian Health Insurance System

Health Plan Benefits and Coverage Matrix

HEALTH CARE MODELS: INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS

CHOOSING A PRODUCT ACCORDING TO YOUR LIFESTYLE NEEDS:

Regulating healthcare financing Benefit options Risk pooling Antiselection In what context?

National Health Insurance in Zimbabwe. Presented By: S. Muperi Acting Chief Social Security Officer, NSSA

POLICY BRIEF. Figure 1: Total, general government, and private expenditures on health as percentages of GDP

UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE III Two Tier: Israel and the Netherlands

A health financing reform solution for Kenya: Expansion of National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF)

Universal coverage financing overview and strategies

Ashadul Islam Director General, Health Economics Unit Ministry of Health and Family Welfare

Measuring and monitoring progress towards Universal Health Coverage

PROJECT INFORMATION DOCUMENT (PID) APPRAISAL STAGE Report No.: PIDA Project Name. Region. Country. Sector(s) Health (100%) Theme(s)

SALGA REFERENCE GUIDE. Feel confident that someone is always on your side.

Securing Sustainable Financing: A Priority for Health Programs in Namibia

ZIMBABWE HEALTH FINANCING STRATEGY 2017 UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE

PROJECT INFORMATION DOCUMENT (PID) APPRAISAL STAGE Report No.: PIDA Project Name. Region. Country

California Natural Products: EPO Option Coverage Period: 01/01/ /31/2017

I (E)nsuring Access to Healthcare

Universal Health Coverage Assessment: Taiwan. Universal Health Coverage Assessment. Taiwan. Jui-fen Rachel Lu. Global Network for Health Equity (GNHE)

Compulsory Health Insurance in Lithuania

GLOSSARY. MEDICAID: A joint federal and state program that helps people with low incomes and limited resources pay health care costs.

Opportunities and Challenges for Public sector Medical Insurance Schemes in a Private Sector Ms B Mfenyana 06 October 2016 Second colloquium

The Path to Integrated Insurance System in China

UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE: holding countries to account

Universal Health Coverage Assessment. Tanzania. Gemini Mtei and Suzan Makawia. Global Network for Health Equity (GNHE)

The road to UHC in Rwanda: what have we learnt so far?

The NIHDI. A closer look. National Institute for Health and Disability Insurance. Thomas Rousseau Coopami

Council conclusions on the EU role in Global Health. 3011th FOREIGN AFFAIRS Council meeting Brussels, 10 May 2010

Thomas Rousseau NIHDI - COOPAMI 2. Ulla Cahay NIHDI - COOPAMI

Bulgaria. Health Care & Long-Term Care Systems

Universal Health Coverage Assessment. Republic of the Fiji Islands. Wayne Irava. Global Network for Health Equity (GNHE)

ACCESS TO THE HIGHEST QUALITY PRIMARY HEALTHCARE AT AFFORDABLE PRICES

Colombia REACHING THE POOR WITH HEALTH SERVICES. Using Proxy-Means Testing to Expand Health Insurance for the Poor. Public Disclosure Authorized

Mitigating the Impact of the Global Economic Crisis on Household Health Spending

HEALTH BUDGET BRIEF 2018 TANZANIA. Key Messages and Recommendations

Nationwide Life Insurance Co.: University of Southern Maine (Domestic) Coverage Period: 8/15/13 8/14/14

Nationwide Life Insurance Co.: University of Southern Maine (International) Coverage Period: 8/1/13-7/31/14

Bismarck vs. Beveridge: is there increasing convergence between health financing systems?

(?~~ Cass Wisniewski, CPA Senior VP & Chief Financial Officer Hurley Medical Center. November 29, 2017 RE:

Schedule of Benefits

First Balkan Forum on: Health Care Reform

Health Service System Board

UnitedHealthcare Choice Plus. United HealthCare Insurance Company. Certificate of Coverage

Country Profile Republic of Ghana

Social Health Protection In Lao PDR

BOTSWANA BUDGET BRIEF 2018 Health

NHS North Central London Commissioning Strategy and QIPP Plan 2012/ /15

MAKING HEALTH INSURANCE MARKETS WORK FOR THE POOR IN SOUTH AFRICA

Comment and input in preparation for the seminar on the regulation of healthcare financing

Primary care reforms, DRGs and move to single payor

AXIS. CompCare Wellness Medical Scheme. Information and Benefit Guide 2018

Health Sector Dynamics

PRIVATISATION AND THE HEALTH CRISIS IN POST-APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA S HEALTH PROFILE

9644/10 YML/ln 1 DG E II

Health Spending Explorer

Health resource tracking is the process of measuring health spending and the flow

PMB Review: What s next? Evelyn Thsehla Clinical Researcher

BridgeSpan Health Company: BridgeSpan Silver HDHP 2000 MyChoice Northwest

Universal Health Coverage (UHC): Myths and Challenges

NATIONAL POLICY IN HEALTH FINANCING

Health Expenditure and Finance Data presented in OECD Health Data 2013 are based on:

LOW COST BENEFIT OPTION FRAMEWORK. Paresh Prema GM: Benefits Management CMS Indaba 8 September 2015

Yes. Some of the services this plan doesn t cover are listed on page 4

Medical Expense Reimb. Plan, PORAC Retiree Med. Trust: Coverage Period: Begins on or after 7/1/13

Universal health coverage roadmap Private sector engagement to improve healthcare access

Social security and retirement reform a progress report

Government Gazette Staatskoerant

Transcription:

Presentation to SAMA Conference 2015 NHI MODEL, RELATIONSHIP TO FINANCE AND ITS EFFECTS ON PUBLIC AND PRIVATE MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS Date: 19 SEPTEMBER 2015 Venue: Sandton Convention Centre Dr Aquina Thulare 1

CONTENT OF HEALTH FINANCING SYSTEMS Classifications or models National Health System (Beveridge) Social Health Insurance System (Bismarck) National Health Insurance (Hybrids) Functions and policies Collection Pooling Purchasing Benefits and rationing German citizens are not more insured than British citizens just because they call their system insurance Understand systems (and reform options) in terms of functions, not labels or models 2 2

Towards UHC : direction in which to move your system UHC is about objectives, not instruments UHC objectives matter at level of system, not schemes UHC doesn t mean everything for everyone Every country can do something to move towards UHC 3 3

CONCEPTUAL APPROACH ON HEALTH FINANCING STRATEGIES THAT PROMOTE PROGRESS TOWARDS UHC Health financing within the overall health system Revenue collection UHC intermediate objectives Equity in resource distribution Final coverage objectives Utilization Need Pooling Benefits Efficiency Quality Purchasing Rest of health system Transparency and accountability Wider context/ extra-sectoral factors (SDH) Universal financial protection Kutzin, 2013 (WHO) 4 4

Descriptive framework Policy objectives Fiscal context CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR ANALYSIS: PILLARS FOR MOVING FROM CONCEPTS TO POLICY DESIGN Health financing policy analysis and viable options for reform Where are we starting from? Where should we go? What kind of vehicle can we afford to get us there? How far and how fast? Kutzin, 2013 (WHO) Starting point, direction, and reality check 5 5

Descriptive framework Policy objectives Fiscal context 1 ST PILLAR: MOVING FROM CONCEPTS TO POLICY DESIGN Health financing policy analysis and viable options for reform Where are we starting from? Starting point, direction, and reality check 6 6

PROFILE OF SA Population over 55million (>60% urban) Middle-income (2014) : GDP = $349 billion Total expenditure on health pc (2013): $ 1 121 Total expenditure on health % GDP (2013): 8.93 Life expectancy 60.6/64.3 years ( Midyear Population Estimates 2015, StatsSA) High inequality (Ginicoefficient) = 0.69 7 7

49% of THE Salaries; historical budgets; budget deficits $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 49% of THE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Fee for Service 8 8

CONSEQUENCES OF FRAGMENTATION: INEQUITY IN DISTRIBUTION OF BENEFITS 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% % share of benefit % share of need Poorest 20% of population Second poorest 20% Middle 20% Second richest 20% Richest 20% Source: Ataguba & McIntyre (2009) 9 9

Descriptive framework Policy objectives Fiscal context 2 nd PILLAR: MOVING FROM CONCEPTS TO POLICY DESIGN Health financing policy analysis and viable options for reform Where should we go? Starting point, direction, and reality check 10 10

NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN 2030 VISION AND TRAJECTORY FOR HEALTH National Development Plan (NDP) 2030 envisions a health system that works for everyone and produces positive health outcomes, and is accessible to all NDP Vision says that by 2030 South Africa should have: Raised the life expectancy of South Africans to at least 70 years; Produced a generation of under-20s that is largely free of HIV; Reduced the burden of disease; Achieved an infant mortality rate of less than 20 deaths per thousand live births, including an under-5 mortality rate of less than 30 per thousand; Achieved a significant shift in equity, efficiency and quality of health service provision; Achieved universal coverage; Significantly reduced the social determinants of disease and adverse environmental factors. 11 11

WHAT WILL NHI MEAN FOR SOUTH AFRICA National Health Insurance (NHI) as a financing mechanism that will move us towards universal health coverage (UHC) NHI is aimed at ensuring that: all South Africans have access to quality health care irrespective of their socio-economic status From each according to ability to each according to need health services are delivered equitably the population does not pay for accessing health services at the point of use the population has financial risk protection against catastrophic health expenditure 12 12

13

GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR NHI Health as a Human Right and Universalism Social Solidarity Equity Public Good Affordability Efficiency Effectiveness Appropriateness 14 14

The Equity And Solidarity Principles In Pooling Finances And Risks National Health Insurance rich poor contribution according to income solidarity principle benefit according to need Healthy young childless ill old families 15 15

POPULATION COVERAGE NHI will establish entitlements and obligations for the population Entitlements: services available to covered population Obligations: responsibilities to be met by the covered persons in order to obtain the benefits (e.g. referral, other rules governing rationing of use of health services) 16

PHC SERVICE COVERAGE Maternal, women and child services Reproductive health and rights HIV/ AIDS and TB services Chronic Non- Communicable Disease services Violence and Injuries Nutritional services Mental Health services Oral Health services School Health services Rehabilitation services Optometry Basic curative services Emergency medical services Clinical support services including basic diagnostic services such as radiology and pathology NHI 18 18

HOSPITAL SERVICE COVERAGE Emergency Medicine Internal Medicine Family Medicine Psychiatry Obstetrics and Gynaecology Paediatrics and neonatology Surgery Anaesthesia Urology Orthopaedics Oncology Ophthalmology Radiology Pathology All sub-specialities etc. 19 19

PURCHASING OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES Public and private health care providers will be accredited according to clearly stipulated criteria; PHC: GPs working in multidisciplinary teams, clinics; In-patient care at all levels of care through appropriately accredited and contracted public and private facilities 20

21 21

ACTIVE PURCHASING HEALTH CARE SERVICES Ensuring that all personal health services are free at the point of care and that the population is guaranteed financial risk protection at all times Giving incentives to providers for performance on efficiency and quality Gate keeping at primary, and higher levels of care will be implemented- Upward and downward referral system Leverage economies of scale and use purchasing power to ensure affordability and long-term sustainability Centralised procurement of key resources 22 22

OBJECTIVES OF STRATEGIC AND ACTIVE PURCHASING Assesses population needs for health services Effective Health service Provision Information on Service Coverage Service Benefits updates and refinement Ensures that the required services are available through purchasing these services from providers that deliver efficient, accessible, high quality services Provided and described in terms of the types of services to be provided at each level of care using clinical guidelines, protocols and formularies Includes personnel, equipment and other resources required to deliver types of services and guidance on referral mechanisms On an on-going basis taking into account the epidemiological and demographic profiles of the population through the Benefits Advisory Committee Allocative efficiency Prioritizing a cost-effective mix of services Financial protection Prioritizing mix of service and cost coverage that is likely to protect people against catastrophic risk Other efficiency Promoting efficient use of the health system dimensions 23

Descriptive framework Policy objectives Fiscal context 3 RD PILLAR: MOVING FROM CONCEPTS TO POLICY DESIGN Health financing policy analysis and viable options for reform What kind of vehicle can we afford to get us there? How far and how fast? Starting point, direction, and reality check 24 24

Stewardship of financing and provision (governance, regulation, information) Provision of services Health care Allocation mechanisms (provider payment) Purchasing of services Allocation mechanisms Pooling of funds Allocation mechanisms Economies of scale and efficiencies Single Payor / purchaser Social solidarity and cross-subsidisation Single Pool for Income and Risk COVERED POPULATION Collection of funds Prepayment Taxes/ Contributions 25 25

Percent of total health care expenditure QUO VADIS? 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Mandatory pre-payment Voluntary pre-payment Out-of-pocket WHO National Health Accounts dataset (2009 data) 26

Percent of total health care expenditure VOILA!! 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Mandatory pre-payment Voluntary pre-payment Out-of-pocket WHO National Health Accounts dataset (2009 data) not quite!!! 27

NHI AS A % OF GDP 28

POOLING UNDER NHI Creation of a single publicly owned and publicly administered fund to pool funds on behalf of the entire population NHI will NOT fragment the pool: Bigger is better! Reform of budgeting and allocation processes Single purchasing mechanism that will strategically purchase health services from contracted public and private providers 29 29

ENVISAGED NHI ARCHITECTURE / VEHICLE MINISTRY OF HEALTH Stewardship (Policy & Regulation) PROVIDERS (Public & Private) Provide Clinical and nonclinical data Provider Payment and Credentialing PURCHASER (NHIF) Provision of quality services Utilization of services SA Citizens and Legal Residents Taxes and Contributions Access to quality Comprehensive Health Service Entitlements and Financial Risk Protection 30 30

THE OHSC AND LINKAGES TO THE NHI FUND OHSC Monitoring of risk Certification Compliance with standards & norms NHI xx Fund Services to be provided Contracting Cost / price Service provision Specific criteria for Contracting: Licensing by Statutory Council Certification by OHSC Ability to provide a range of services that are specified for each level of care; Having the appropriate number and mix of health care professionals to deliver the specified services; Adherence to treatment protocols and guidelines, including prescribing from the NHIF formulary; Initiating care at the primary care level and adherence to referral pathways; Submission of routine information required for performance monitoring; and Adherence to the pricing regimen for services delivered. 31 31

POLICY CONSIDERATION ON PROVIDER PAYMENT ACCREDITATION OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PROVIDERS Role of OHSC Role of the NHI Fund PRIMARY CARE LEVEL PROVIDERS REIMBURSED USING A RISK-ADJUSTED CAPITATION SYSTEM Determination of capitation formula Annual capitation amount linked to target utilization and cost levels Addressing Equity issues The role and determination of P4P and performance-based reimbursement ACCREDITED PHARMACISTS Essential Drug List (EDL) Role of the Central Procurement Agency (CPA ) Pharmaceutical Coding Schema AT HOSPITAL LEVEL, GRADUAL MIGRATION TOWARDS DIAGNOSIS RELATED GROUPS (DRGS) Contracted facilities reimbursed using global budgets in the initial phases Phasing out of global budgets Case-based reimbursement Coding Schema 32

CONCLUSION 33