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A presentation at the Center for Social Development, Washington University at St. Louis on 27th April 2005 Urban Health Care Reform in China– Personal Responsibility and the Role of the State Chack-Kie Wong Professor Social Work Department The Chinese University of Hong Kong 1 Introduction Big spending in health care does not produce better health care protection USA 14% of GDP whilst 40-45 million uninsured Economic development or wealth does not necessary bring about development and equity in health care protection 2 China – another case of more spending but inequitable health care protection In the past few decades, a shift of the state, across societies, to endorse market-oriented policies in health care reforms emphasizing personal responsibility The presentation argues against the prevalent pro-market orthodoxy that economic development is not a sufficient condition for health care development An indispensable role of the state in health care, esp. in the finance of health care China’s case – health care is not affordable for the majority when it is much wealthier today But was once lauded when it was much poorer 3 How serious is the problem? Health insurance coverage Only 6.5% of the rural population in the late 1990s 20% of urban population or 30% of urban employees at present ‘Back to poverty’ due to lack of health care protection Indicators of adverse effects of under-development in health care Life expectancy China- 1981-2000, 3.5% increase in life expectancy Middle-income countries – 1980-1998 (5%) High-income countries –1980-1998 (4%) 4 Infant mortality – China - 6.3% decrease 1981-2000 World average - 23% decrease 1980-1998 Regional disparity Life expectancy Infant mortality Shanghai – 77 (2000) Guizhou - 63.5 (2000) Rural rate 3.14 times > urban one (2000) A World Health Organization report (2000) rates China 144/191 in overall health care system performance 188/191 in fairness in financial contribution 5 China’s health care system and its reform initiatives China’s traditional health care system Urban – Government Insurance & Labor Insurance, both publicly funded system, exclusive for employees in the cities Rural – Cooperative health care, barefoot doctors The rationale underlying urban health care reform Too costly – moral hazard issue (nominal cost to patients Inhibit labor mobility – too good fringe benefits Unfavorable to state-owned enterprises – newly created private enterprises do not bear such cost 6 The Developments Early 1980s The central government capped the subsidies to public hospitals Hospitals have begun to rely upon profits from charges and high-end medical equipment and sale of medicine Uncontrollable rise in expenses Unaffordable for the enterprises to pay The beginning of the era of cost-sharing – rise in personal responsibility in health care protection Co-payment by employees for medical treatment cost, say 10-20% 7 1993 – the new model formed its shape 2 parts – socially pooled fund + personal medical accounts Contribution side – Employment units 6% (average monthly wage) Employees 2% (average monthly wage) Managed by a state organ State contribution through tax relief 8 Benefit side – (primarily a phasesystem) Employees uses the personal account for treatment first If personal account depleted, not yet reached the threshold of using the socially pooled fund - selfpayment The threshold of socially pooled fund –10% of the last year’s average local wage (city as an unit) The ceiling of entitlement to the socially pooled fund – 4 times of the average annual local wages Beyond the ceiling – serious illness insurance up to 300,000 yuan (8.3 yuan=1US$) 9 1994 pilot in two medium-sized cities 1996 extended to cover nearly 60 cities 1998 the Decree to establish Basic Health Insurance System 2003 rural health care reform Unifying Labor insurance and Government insurance into the new Basic Health Insurance System Extended to cover all cities and employees of all ownership types (enhance labor mobility and equalize labor cost) A tripartite-payment new rural cooperative system Pilot stage – but with 80 million participants in 2004 This presentation focuses on urban health care reform - national full implementation since the 1998 Decree 10 Assessing the initial impact of the reformed urban health care system Three components of the reform Basic Health Insurance Reform of the hospitals The circulation and production of medicine This presentation looks at the financial side Key to personal responsibility and the role of the state Table 1 for its coverage and financing sustainability In general, the reformed system has begun to cover all cities and it is cost-efficient and sustainable 11 Table 1 Development of Basic Health Insurance in China, 1998-2003 1998 1999 Employees (‘000) 4,017 4,698 Retirees (‘000) 1,076 Total (‘000) (Annual change) 5,093 (Employee:+36% Retirees:+45.7%) Cities/ Districts 40+ 59 284 19.5 24.5 15.6 9.8 Income (100 million yuan) Expenditure (100 million yuan) Accumulated surplus (Deficit) (100 million yuan) 2000 2001 2002 2003 54,710 69,260 79,750 18,150 24,740 29,270 94,000 (+29.0%) 109,028 (+16.0%) 339 Nearly all Nearly all 170 384 607.8 890 16.5 124 244 409.4 654 8 89 253 450.7 379 43,320 1,241 5,939 43,320 72,860 (+16.6%) (+629.4%) (+68.2%) Source: Annual Statistical Announcement of the Development of Labour and Social Insurance, Labour and Social Security Ministry, PRC. (1998-2003) (In Chinese) http://www.molss.gov.cn/ Note: All are year-end figures. 12 Table 2 illustrates how far is the success of the transfer in terms of financial responsibility since 1998 Source of finance for health care Findings from two national surveys on health care services Successful In shifting the sources of finance from traditional health care system to the new basic health insurance More state’s commitment in the former The reformed one basically an employeremployee co-payment insurance system Self-payment from individual citizens remained unchanged Personal responsibility still the same 13 Table 2 Source of Finance of China’s Urban Health Care, 1998 & 2003 (%) 1998 4.7 2003 32.2 Government Insurance Labour Insurance Cooperative Insurance 16.0 28.7 2.7 4.0 4.6 6.6 Commercial Insurance Self Payment Others Total -44.1 3.7 99.9 5.6 44.8 2.2 100.0 Social Insurance (Basic insurance, serious illness insurance) Source: Ministry of Health, PRC National Survey on Health Service in 1998, 2003, see 2003 & 2004 China Health Statistics Summary. Ministry of Health, PRC. http://www.moh.gov.cn/statistics/digest03/t28.htm 14 Table 3 illustrates the role of the state in health care finance, on the basis of a broader and longer policy context Over the economic reform period (1978 0nward) It reveals the dwindling financing role of the state Together with substantial reduction on the share of social health expenses (social insurance) Individual citizen payment increased at the same time Total health expenses as % of GDP also increased Since 1998, the reformed health care system (19982002) Effect of the reformed system – the shares of health care expenses among the three major parties not much changed 15 Table 3 China health care expenses and national wealth, 1980-2002 (at current price) Total health expenses (100 million yuan) Government health expenses (%) Social health expenses (%) Individual health expenses (%) Per capita health expenses (yuan) Total health expenses as % of GDP GDP (100 million yuan) 1980 1990 14.32 743.0 2,257.8 3,384.9 3,776.5 4,178.6 4,764.0 5,150.3 5,684.6 36.2 25.0 17.0 15.4 15.6 15.3 14.9 15.5 15.2 42.6 38.0 32.7 27.7 26.6 25.5 24.5 24.0 26.5 21.2 37.0 50.3 56.9 57.8 59.2 60.6 60.5 58.3 14.51 65.0 190.6 273.8 302.6 331.9 376.4 403.6 442.6 3.17 4.00 3.86 4.55 4.82 5.10 5.33 5.37+ 5.42 451.8 1995 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 18,548 58,478 74,463 78,345 82,068 89,442 95,933 104,882 16 The findings of the two social surveys in Wuhan Wuhan, a mid-China city Wuhan – different indicators, average of China Too large of China as a unit of analysis Annual disposable income - 8,525 yuan, closed to national average - 8,472 yuan, in 2003 Unemployment rate -4.6%, closed to national - 4.3% in 2003 Target respondents Employees and patients (Major stakeholders of the reformed health care system) The reformed system serves the few privileged If these two groups are also unsatisfied with the reformed system, the rest will be even worse 17 Survey Methodology Stratified quota random sampling for even representation of the target populations Units – patients from 3 different levels of hospitals; employees from government and government subsidized public agencies, state-owned enterprises, and other enterprises. Samples similar in terms of gender distribution and ownership type (male -52.6% and Wuhan 51.5%; 63% from first two groups, whilst Wuhan 2/3) But older, with higher income and better educated than the Wuhan population Reflected the nature of the reformed system – at the service of the more wealthy and those with health insurance (with good employment, in traditional sense) 18 The findings of the surveys The perceptions of responsibility in health care To see whether any shift in responsibility for health care protection Table 4 reveals the traditional welfarist ethos of clinging to state protection still strong despite it is not in line with the prevalent policy practice 19 Table 4 Respondents’ perceptions of responsibility in health care in Wuhan, China (2003) Employees % (N) 1. 2. 3. Those who are not able to pay for medical fees should be assisted by the government or the employment unit Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total The government has no responsibility to provide basic health care to all Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total It is reasonable to treat urban and rural residents differently in terms of health care benefits Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total Patients % (N) Overall % (N) ² 83.2 8.8 8.1 100.0 (247) (26) (24) (297) 88.2 7.7 4.0 100.0 (262) (23) (12) (297) 85.7 8.2 6.1 100.0 (509) (49) (36) (594) 4.626 5.4 3.1 91.5 100.0 (16) (9) (270) (295) 8.3 2.8 89.0 100.0 (24) (8) (258) (290) 6.8 2.9 90.3 100.0 (40) (17) (528) (585) 1.889 24.3 18.6 57.1 100.0 (68) (52) (160) (280) 28.1 11.3 60.6 100.0 (77) (31) (166) (274) 26.2 15.0 58.8 100.0 (145) (83) (326) (554) 5.918 20 Table 4 Respondents’ perceptions of responsibility in health care in Wuhan, China (2003) (Cont’d) Employees % (N) 4. 5. 6. One should not be entitled to health care protection if one does not pay for medical insurance Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total Medical expenses are the primary responsibility of individual, employment units or the government Individual Employment units Government Total Which one of the following should be responsible for medical expenses above the ceiling if patients do not have medical insurance for serious illness Patients and their families Patients’ employment units Government Total *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001 Patients % (N) Overall % (N) ² 47.0 17.2 35.8 100.0 (134) (49) (102) (285) 39.9 16.7 43.4 100.0 (115) (48) (125) (288) 43.5 16.9 39.6 100.0 (249) (97) (227) (573) 3.775 13.1 34.1 52.8 100.0 (33) (86) (133) (252) 14.6 32.1 53.3 100.0 (36) (79) (131) (246) 13.9 33.1 53.0 100.0 (69) (165) (264) (498) .370 24.2 22.0 53.8 100.0 (45) (41) (100) (186) 17.0 20.9 62.1 100.0 (31) (38) (113) (182) 20.7 21.5 57.9 100.0 (76) (79) (213) (368) 3.443 21 Table 5 illustrates how respondents regard the relationship between economic development and health care protection Assuming people should enjoy better health care protection (better national wealth and personal wealth since economic reform) The first question is to examine how welfare development as compared with economic development as a government priority The second two questions are whether medical expenses are affordable to the general public and the country at large 22 Table 5 Respondents’ perceptions of economic development and health care in Wuhan, China (2003) Employees % (N) 1. 2. 3. The primary role of the government is economic development and not welfare improvement Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total Medical expenses are more than what current economic conditions in our country can afford Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total The current medical examination and treatment expenses are more than what the general public can afford Agree/Strongly agree Half and half Disagree/Strongly disagree Total *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001 Patients % (N) Overall % (N) ² 11.3 4.1 84.6 100.0 (33) (12) (247) (292) 8.5 4.8 86.7 100.0 (25) (14) (254) (293) 9.9 4.4 85.6 100.0 (58) (26) (501) (585) 1.353 73.5 11.3 15.3 100.0 (202) (31) (42) (275) 75.4 8.8 15.8 100.0 (205) (24) (43) (272) 74.4 10.1 15.5 100.0 (407) (55) (85) (547) .908 86.1 6.4 7.4 100.0 (255) (19) (22) (296) 84.7 8.7 6.6 100.0 (243) (25) (19) (287) 85.4 7.5 7.0 100.0 (498) (44) (41) (583) 1.188 23 Conclusion The reformed health care system helped institutionalized the inequitable health care financial structure Individual citizens still took up the largest share – not affected by the reformed system 57.8% in 1998, 58.3% in 2002 The state shied away from its responsibility - 36.2% in 1980, 15.6% in 1998, 15.2% in 2002 The state’s little financial commitment resulted in larger total health care expenses of the whole society Continued rise in national wealth for health care Total health expenses, 3.17% of GDP (1980) to 5.42% (2002) Whilst GDP rose 23 times between 1980-2002 Equity in financial contribution not solved The state spends less resulted in larger share of national wealth for health care and an unfair health care system 24 The old ethos of state responsible for health care protection was still much alive amongst the respondents despite the reformed system did not follow this line China does not strike a balance in economic development and health care protection Phenomenal growth in the reform period coupled with a shift of responsibility from state protection to individual responsibility in health care A strong case to argue that a retreat of the state in the economy should not mean a corresponding retreat in the society – especially for the vulnerable Simply market oriented policies do not work in health care 25 Specific policy recommendations for the Chinese government An open-ended health care assistance should be in place, if not that of a universal health care Some encouraging note - In 2004, 300 million yuan pledged by the central government on this purpose, but short of an open-ended entitlement WHO standard of the share of GDP for health care Middle-income countries 3%-7% China at 5.4% in 2002 Not about share of wealth for health care but its cross-sector distribution and system designs E.g., the state capped its subsidies to public hospitals that drove the escalation of medical expenses 26 A compelling case for increased government spending in health care to its share at the prereform period (1980 at 36% of total health expenses) If too radical, to 1990 level at 25% Help relieve the pressure on public hospitals and individual citizens This case study illustrates the ‘surrender’ of the state in health care protection to marketoriented policies resulted in greater social and economic costs to the society Thank you! 27