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International Health Policy Program -Thailand Tracking progress in universal health access: Monitoring effectiveness of universal coverage in Thailand.

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Presentation on theme: "International Health Policy Program -Thailand Tracking progress in universal health access: Monitoring effectiveness of universal coverage in Thailand."— Presentation transcript:

1 International Health Policy Program -Thailand Tracking progress in universal health access: Monitoring effectiveness of universal coverage in Thailand Supon Limwattananon, MPHM, PhD Viroj Tangcharoensathien, MD, PhD Prince Mahidol Award Conference, Bangkok Parallel Session 2.3 29 January 2010

2 International Health Policy Program -Thailand 2 Objectives 1.To describe the four-decade trend of key health indicators 2.To demonstrate relationship between health resource inputs, service outputs and health and financial outcomes 3.To assess existing data sources for tracking the UC progress

3 Top ten MDG4 performers Source: Analysis of World Health Statistics Thailand 2000-05 Source: Rohde et al. (Lancet 2008) Good Health at Low Cost ! Where is Thailand standing at? * GNI 100,000/year U5MR vs. THE per capita Low- and middle-income countries Rank

4 Source: Analysis of Socio-Economic Surveys (SES, various years) 8.4% 0.4% MDG1

5 UC scheme 2001 * Health expenditure > 10% of total expenditure per household * Source: National Health Accounts (NHA) and analysis of Socio-Economic Surveys (SES, various years) Asian economic crisis

6 Population coverage of health insurance before and after the UC reform in 2001 Source: Analysis of Health and Welfare Surveys (HWS, various years) LIC: Low-Income Card Scheme  Tax-funded, public welfare program (defunct) VHC: Voluntary Health Card Scheme  Subsidized, voluntary, community-based health insurance (defunct) UC: Universal Coverage Scheme  Tax-funded, entitlement scheme for the rest of all Thai population SS: Social Security Scheme  Compulsory, contributory, social health insurance for formal private employees CSMB: Civil Servant Medical Benefit Scheme  Tax-funded, fringe benefit for government employees/pensioners, dependants

7 2000 1970 1 st -3 rd NHP (1962-76) 100% provincial hospitals 1. Infrastructure development The path of health care coverage LIC 1975 1990 CSMB 1980 CHF 1983 SS 1991 4 th -5 th NHP (1977-86) Expansion of district hospitals and health centers UC 2001 VHC 1994 1980 MOPH established 1942 15 provincial hospitals 300+ health centers 2. Innovative financing Source: Adapted from Srithamrongsawat Prospective payment system (PPS)- Capitation for SS (OP-IP)- Diagnostic-related groups (DRG) for LIC/VHC (IP) PPS expansion- Capitation for UC (OP) - DRG for UC (IP) - DRG for CSMB (IP) - Direct billing for CSMB (OP) LIC+ 1996 SS+ 1994 SS+ 2002

8 National Health Plans 1 -th 2 -th 3 -th 4 -th 5 -th 6 -th 7 -th 8 -th 9 -th 10 -th District hospitals MD mandated rural service Technical nurses Asian economic crisis Source: Analysis of Health Resource Surveys (HRS, various years) Four decades of health infrastructure development

9 District hospitals 1977 Village health volunteers 1977 National EPI 1978 Social Security Act 1991 Universal Coverage scheme 2001 Asian economic crisis 1997 Technical nurses 1982 Low-Income Card scheme 1975 Community health funds 1983 Voluntary Health Card scheme 1994 Civil Servant Medical Benefit scheme 1980 National Health Plans: 3 -th 4 -th 5 -th 6 -th 7 -th 8 -th 9 -th 10 -th MD mandatory rural service 1972 Source: Analysis of IHME data Child mortality trends and health systems development

10 U5MR t = – 16.75 + 2.9 * 10 3 -Population per doctor t + 12.2 * 10 3 -Population per nurse t + 38.1 * 10 3 -Population per bed t – 0.1 * 10 3 -USD GNI per capita t AR(1) time-series analysis

11 Source: Analysis of HWS (on health utilization) and SES (on health financing) Pro-rich Pro-poor Progressive financing utilization

12 CI – 0.372 Source: Analysis of MICS2006 CI – 0.260 Factors contributing to child malnutrition Concentration index (negative) Weight for age(negative) Height for age Elasticity Contribution 54.7% Elasticity Contribution 51.8% 1. Child’s age0.0061.3860.8%0.5210.3% 2. Child’s squared age0.010-0.665-0.7%-0.195-0.2% 3. Male child-0.004-0.047-0.05%0.0570.08% 4. (log) Income per capita0.026-4.77933.7%-3.00130.3% 5. Mother’s college education0.604-0.0477.7%-0.0337.7% 6. Number of children in household-0.0240.4322.7%0.3463.1% 7. Living in urban area0.264-0.15410.9%-0.10510.7% Inequitydecomposition negative Underweight = 9.3% Stunting = 11.9%

13 International Health Policy Program -Thailand 13 Source: Health Resource Surveys; Civil Registration (Richest : Poorest)

14 Provincial economic status Two distinctive indicators GPP per capita (Baht) 1-30,000 30,001-50,000 50,001-70,000 70,001-100,000 100,001+ Poverty head count ratio (%) 0-5 6-10 11-15 16-20 21+ Source: National Economic and Social Development Board (NESDB) 1. Administrative reports 2. HH SES surveys + Pop. census Gross Provincial Product 2004 Small Area Estimation (GPP)Poverty Map 2004 r = – 0.4

15 U5MR vs. Gross Provincial Product 2004 R 2 = 0.064 72 Provinces (Greater Bangkok excluded) Three deep south provinces

16 U5MR vs. Provincial poverty rate 2004 72 Provinces (Greater Bangkok excluded) R 2 = 0.036 Three deep south provinces

17 R 2 = 0.089R 2 = 0.104 R 2 = 0.136 Provincial variations

18 Healthstatus Financing & risk protection HealthutilizationHealthresource 1. Population & household surveys - DHS 1987 - MICS 2006 - NHES 1991, 1996, 2003, 2008 Socio-Economic Survey (SES) 1957-1986 (q 5 y) 1988-2006 (q 2 y) 2007+ (q 1 y) Health and Welfare Survey (HWS) 1974-1978 (q 1 y) 1981-2001 (q 5 y) 2003-2007 (q 1 y) 2009+ (q 2 y) 2. Administrative & facility-based datasets Vital Registry VR 1957+ National Health Accounts NHA 1994-2008 Health insurance electronic IP data 2002+ Health Resource Survey HRS 1962+ Data available for tracking

19 International Health Policy Program -Thailand 19 Summary Four-decade investment in public health infrastructure in rural areas results in – High and equitable level of population health outcomes Functioning health service is a prerequisite of extension of health insurance Targeting scheme  public welfare CBHI for informal sector  Universal coverage extending to the uninsured SHI and CSMB for formal sector results in very low catastrophic and poverty impacts Comprehensive national datasets plus analytical capacities  facilitate tracking the progress

20 International Health Policy Program -Thailand 20 Conclusions Tracking a progress in the universal health access need to exploit wide variations in health outcomes, service outputs, and resource inputs – This requires regular information from (demand-side) household surveys and (supply-side) facility-based administrative reports at the national and sub-national levels – Analysis of long time-series, multiple cross-sectional, and panel data would help increase validity in claiming health systems improvement as a result of health care reforms


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