Transcript Slide 1

Reforming Prudently
Under Pressure
Health Financing Reform and the
Rationalization of Public Sector Health Expenditures
Firas Raad, DPH
World Bank Presentation
MOH Conference, Ramallah, May 8, 2009
Key Messages of Report
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Public sector health financing is at a critical
crossroads in the Palestinian Authority
Financial sustainability severely compromised due
to conditions of economic contraction and a
ballooning of public sector health spending
Prudent medium-term reforms to improve financial
sustainability are necessary and can be undertaken
in parallel to emergency management efforts
Expanding social health insurance over the medium
and long term requires certain economic prerequisites and enabling conditions
Outline of Presentation
 Key health sector challenges
 Sector characteristics and underlying
trends
 Financial sustainability and medium-term
health insurance reform options
 Opportunities
 Challenges
 Summary conclusions
Key Health Sector Challenges
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Conflict conditions and closure policies
Fragmented institutional framework
Unpredictable health financing and donor
dependency
Efficiency of public sector health
expenditures
Financial protection from illness and injury
MOH management capacity constraints
Maintaining good health status outcomes
and increasing burden of chronic diseases
Impact of Conflict Conditions
Percent of Fatalities and Injuries Among Women and Children in Recent Gaza War
1,314 fatalities and 5,300 injuries
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
% children
fatalities
% women
fatalities
Source: United Nations, January 20, 2009
.
% children
injuries
% women
injuries
Donor Dependency and Projected Aid
External Support
 The international donor
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
Projected Aid
2005
2005
MOH External
Budget Support
2007
2007
MOH External
Budget Support
community pledged US$7.5
billion to fund the Palestinian
Reform and Development
Plan over the 2008-11 period.
 In 2008, budget support to
the PA reached about US$1.76
billion, nearly 80 percent
more than 2007 - received as
much as US$200 million in
project aid.
 Continued donor support
maybe impacted by
international financial crisis
Efficiency of Public Sector Health Spending
MOH Wage Bill
(US$ mil)
90
Public Sector Spending on
Outside Referrals (US$ mil)
60
80
50
70
60
40
50
30
40
30
20
20
10
10
0
2000
2005
0
2000
2005
Headcount (percent of
households)
Catastrophic Health Spending
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
5
WBG 2007
10
15
20
Catastrophic Spending Thresholds
Egypt 2007
Lebanon 2004/2005
Source: Input papers to World Bank Regional Flagship Report, 2009
25
Libya
Incidence of Catastrophic Health Payments
Percentage of Households
Head Counts Using Total Expenditure (10 %)
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
1998
Source: Mataria, A. 2008
2004
2005
Year
2006
2007
Maintaining Favorable Health Outcomes, 2006
Countries
Outcomes
Life Expectancy
Infant Mortality
Under 5 Mortality
72
21
25
72
26
30
71
29
35
73
20
22
70
42
34
71
36
25
Jordan
Lebanon
Egypt
WBG
MENA
Lower Middle
Income
Source: World Bank HNP Database, 2008
Underlying Trends Affecting Health Sector
Unemployment Rate, 1999-2007
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Deep Poverty, 1998-2006
50
40
30
20
10
0
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007- 2007Q1 Q2
WB
Gaza
Source: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, 2008
1998
2001
2004
WB
2005
Gaza
2006
Macro-Economic Fiscal Framework
2006
Indicators
Real GDP 1997 Market Prices
(annual % change)
Nominal Per Capita GDP
(millions of US dollars
Unemployment Rate (average in
% of labor force)
Recurrent balance in millions of
USD (before external support
and as a % of GDP)
Overall balance in millions in
USD (including development
expenditures and before external
support and as a % of GDP)
2007
2008
2009
Est.
2010
2011
Projection
-4.8
-1.2
2
5
6.5
7.5
1,166
1,257
1,552
1,473
1,561
1,647
23.6
21.3
21.3
19.4
17.9
14.4
2007
2008
Act.
Proj.
2009
2010
Projection
2011
-24.9
-26.7
-20.5
-16.9
-12.7
-9.5
-31.1
-28.7
-23.6
-25.7
-22.3
-19.7
Population Growth and Chronic Diseases
WBG Population , 2010
70 to 74
3.9 mil
WBG Population, 2025
70 to 74
60 to 64
60 to 64
50 to 54
50 to 54
40 to 44
40 to 44
30 to 34
30 to 34
20 to 24
20 to 24
10 to 14
10 to 14
0 to 4
Males Females
Source: World Bank Demographic Projections, 2009
5.9 mil
0 to 4
Males
Females
Central Storyline of Health Policy Report
 Emergency environment in the Palestinian Territories since 2000
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engendered significant and unsustainable imbalances in the
financing of public sector health services
Expansion in expenditures driven by increased MOH employment,
an increase in average salary levels, greater spending on
pharmaceuticals and specialty care referrals to outside providers
Part of the financial imbalance also stemmed from policy decisions
related to the design of the Government Health Insurance Scheme
(GHI).
Since its establishment as an extra revenue-generating scheme for
the MOH, there has been a significant financial gap between
insurance revenues and the cost of benefits
This financial disequilibrium grew with the adoption of the PA
voluntary health insurance program aimed at ameliorating social
conditions following 2001
Insurees Enrolled by Category, 1999-2007
Numbers Enrolled in GHI by Category, 1999-2007
No. of Enrolled HHs
450,000
400,000
Free (Al-Aqsa)
350,000
Receiving Social
Assistance
Compulsory (govt)
300,000
250,000
Workers in Israel
200,000
150,000
Contract groups
100,000
Voluntary
50,000
20
07
20
06
20
05
20
04
20
03
20
02
20
01
20
00
19
99
0
Year
Source: : MOH Health Insurance Directorate, WBG (Data for 2003, 2004, 2007 include estimates for Gaza)
TRENDS IN MOH EMPLOYMENT BY CATEGORY
3500
3000
2500
Physicians
2000
Nurses
1500
Administration
1000
Paramedics
500
0
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Source: World Bank Public Expenditure Review, 2007
Expansive Trends in Outside Referrals
Expenditures of Referrals
US$ mil
MOH Outside Referrals
35000
Expenditures on Referrals (USD 1000)
25000
No. of Referrals
30000
25000
20000
15000
10000
5000
0
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Total Local Overseas
Source: Ministry of Health, 2008
2003
2004
2005
20000
15000
10000
5000
0
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Health Financing Functions and Objectives
Functions
Objectives
Revenue collection
raise sufficient and sustainable
revenues in an efficient and equitable
manner to provide individuals with a
basic package of essential services
which improves health outcomes and
provides financial protection and
consumer satisfaction
Pooling
manage these revenues to equitably and
efficiently create insurance pools
Purchasing
assure the purchase of health services in
an allocatively and technically efficient
manner
Source: Gottret and Schieber, Health Financing Revisited, World Bank 2006
Evolution of Health Financing Systems
Low
Income
Countries
Middle
Income
Countries
Priv. insur
Patient
Out-ofPocket
Social Insur
Gov’t Budget
Community
Financing
Source: Modified from A. Maeda
Patient Outof-Pocket
Social Insur
Gov’t Budget
High
Income
Countries
Patient Outof-Pocket
National Health
Service
Social
Health Insurance
Private
Insurance
Medium-Term Health Insurance Options
Advantages
Policy Option 1:
Consolidate MOH as
integrated national
health service
Policy Option 2:
Maintain the MOH as the
primary financing agency but
strengthen the purchasing
capacity of the MOH.
Policy Option 3:
Move towards establishing a
social health insurance
system based on mandated
contributions and
administered by an
independent national health
insurance agency
Resource mobilization:
Predominantly general tax
revenues
Fund management:
Ministry of Health
Purchasing:
Internal payment reforms
Resource mobilization:
Predominantly general tax revenues,
supplemented by co-payments, other
fees
Fund management:
Ministry of Health
Purchasing:
Contracting providers, alternative
payment methods
Resource mobilization:
Contributory system (payroll tax,
fees, copayments) with general
revenues for targeted subsidies
Fund management:
National Health Insurance Agency
Purchasing:
Contracting providers, alternative
provider payment methods
Disadvantages
- Easy to implement
- Provides universal access to
health services
- Difficult to reform budget
process and introduce
performance payments
- Services limited to MOH
facilities
- Provides universal access to health
services
- More tools to introduce strategic
purchasing
- Expands choice of providers for
patients (NGO, private)
- Technical expertise and capacity
required to manage contracts
- Establishes an independent
financing agency with better defined
accountability - Potential efficiency gains through
better purchasing
- Expands choice of providers for
patients
- Expanding coverage difficult if
economy poor and informal sector
is large
- Potential access problems for noncontributing members
- Exacerbates informality if
contribution rates are high
- Cost escalation could become
problem if purchasing capacity is
weak
National Health Service Approach
Systems financed through general revenues, covering whole
population, care provided through public providers
Strengths
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Pools risks for whole
population
Relies on many different
revenue sources
Single centralized
governance system has
the potential for
administrative efficiency
and cost control
Source: Gottret and Schieber, World Bank 2006
Weaknesses
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Unstable funding due to
nuances of annual budget
process
Often disproportionately
benefits the rich
Potentially inefficient due to
lack of incentives and
effective public sector
management
Social Health Insurance Systems
Systems financed mainly through payroll contributions,
care provided through public and private providers
Challenges
Opportunities
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Additional health revenue source
As a ‘benefit’ tax, there may be more
‘willingness to pay’
Removes financing from annual
general government appropriations
process
Generally provides covered population
with access to a broad package of
services
Often has strong support from
population
Can effectively redistribute between
high and low risk and high and low
income groups in the covered
population
Often serves as the basis for the
expansion to universal coverage
Source: Adapted from Langenbrunner, 2007
 May not lead to more revenues
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overall
May not lead to universal
coverage, poor are often excluded
unless subsidized by government
Payroll contributions can reduce
competitiveness and lead to
higher unemployment
Needs to be subsidized from
general revenues
Long start-up period, and can be
complex and expensive to
manage
Often provides poor benefits for
preventive services and chronic
conditions
Can lead to cost escalation
unless effective purchasing and
contracting mechanisms are in
place
Achieving Universal Coverage Takes Time
23
100%
80%
Thailand
60%
Colombia
40%
Philippines
Kenya
Ghana
20%
0%
1990
1992
Source: Hsiao, 2005
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
High payroll contributions may encourage workers
and businesses to go underground
24
Level of Informal Economy as Percentage of GDP
M acedonia
Bulgaria
Serbia and M ontenegro
Poland
Slovenia
Slovakia
Hungary
Czech Rep ublic
Romania
Source: World Bank , as cited by Waters et al. May 27, 2006
0
10
20
30
40
50
When Contributions Are Linked to Coverage:
Many Have No Insurance
50
45
40
35
Estonia
Russia
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Albania
Lebanon
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Percent Uncovered
Source: Langenbrunner, 2007
25
Social Health Insurance:
Complex Activities Require Skills and Take Time
 Collection
16
 Pooling
14
 Benefits Package
 Contracts
 Payment Systems
 MIS systems
 Claims Processing
12
Estonia
10
Romania
8
Kyrgz
 Quality Assurance
6
Albania
 Regulations
4
Russia
 Forecasting
2
0
Years to Fully
Implement
Source: Langenbrunner, 2007
26
Enabling Factors for SHI (1)
27
1.
Sufficient level of income and strong growth
prospects
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2.
Some margin exists to absorb increase in
labor costs

3.
E.g., South Korea (1977-1989) universal SHI
coverage achieved, average annual per capita GDP
growth rate =13.3%
moderate labor costs prevent negative effects of SHI
contributions on competitiveness, employment and tax
evasion
Limited size of the informal sector

A large informal sector = narrow contribution base,
many people do not participate in SHI
Source: Rahola, 2005
Enabling Factors for SHI (2)
28
Relatively high rate of urbanization
4.
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facilitates the registration of SHI members and the collection
of contributions
Adequate institutional and administrative capacity
5.
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skilled staff and organizational system necessary to run health
insurance funds, and regulate and supervise their activity
6. Good-quality health care infrastructure
 availability of quality health services is essential for
encouraging population to participate and contribute to SHI
7. Existence of national consensus in favor of SHI
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values of the population: preference for equity so that the
population accepts a high level of redistribution
Source: Rahola, 2005
Policy Option 2: Maintain as MOH as primary
financing agency but improve purchasing capacity
 MOH continues to own and operate its primary
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and secondary health service delivery system
Introduces internal contracts with own facilities
and pay for performance mechanisms to
improve quality
Strategic contracting with outside tertiary care
providers (local and overseas) with improved
purchasing capacity
Funded primarily through general tax revenues
and co-payment revenues
Could be viewed as transitional option allowing
for full SHI at a later stage with pre-conditions
fullfilled
Summary Conclusions (1)
 Palestinian health sector is confronted with a historically
unique set of obstacles and challenges
 Impact of occupation, conflict and violence, economic closure
policies, and access and restriction movements have stifled
the capacity of the health sector to evolve and to adequately
respond to the health needs of the population.
 A challenging economic environment, underlying
demographic trends ,a changing epidemiological profile (a
greater burden of chronic diseases) will continue to place
pressure on the public financing of health sector priorities.
 The scarceness and unpredictability of public resources, both
from local revenues and donor funds, will place a higher
premium on raising the efficiency of public sector spending in
the health sector.
Summary Conclusions (2)
 There is no one ‘right’ health financing or health insurance model
 System financing must be sustainable --meaning that future
economic growth generates sufficient levels of income for decent
living standards
 Low to middle income countries face difficult tradeoffs between
financing essential services and providing financial risk protection -prioritization is critical.
 Most countries are challenged to provide universal coverage, reduce
fragmentation among risk pools, and improve purchasing efficiency.
Critical issue is risk pooling, how it is done is really of secondary
importance.