International Health Policy Program, Ministry of Public Health, Thailand.
BMC Public Health. 2012;12 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S6. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-S1-S6. Epub 2012 Jun 22.
Thailand has achieved universal health coverage since 2002 through the implementation of the Universal Coverage Scheme (UCS) for 47 million of the population who were neither private sector employees nor government employees. A well performing UCS should achieve health equity goals in terms of health service use and distribution of government subsidy on health. With these goals in mind, this paper assesses the magnitude and trend of government health budget benefiting the poor as compared to the rich UCS members.
Benefit incidence analysis was conducted using the nationally representative household surveys, Health and Welfare Surveys, between 2003 and 2009. UCS members are grouped into five different socio-economic status using asset indexes and wealth quintiles.
The total government subsidy, net of direct household payment, for combined outpatient (OP) and inpatient (IP) services to public hospitals and health facilities provided to UCS members, had increased from 30 billion Baht (US$ 1 billion) in 2003 to 40-46 billion Baht in 2004-2009. In 2003 for 23% and 12% of the UCS members who belonged to the poorest and richest quintiles of the whole-country populations respectively, the share of public subsidies for OP service was 28% and 7% for the poorest and the richest quintiles, whereby for IP services the share was 27% and 6% for the poorest and richest quintiles respectively. This reflects a pro-poor outcome of public subsidies to healthcare. The OP and IP public subsidies remained consistently pro-poor in subsequent years.The pro-poor benefit incidence is determined by higher utilization by the poorest than the richest quintiles, especially at health centres and district hospitals. Thus the probability and the amount of household direct health payment for public facilities by the poorest UCS members were less than their richest counterparts.
Higher utilization and better financial risk protection benefiting the poor UCS members are the results of extensive geographical coverage of health service infrastructure especially at district level, adequate finance and functioning primary healthcare, comprehensive benefit package and zero copayment at points of services.
自 2002 年以来,泰国通过实施全民医疗保险计划(UCS)为 4700 万既非私营部门员工也非政府员工的人口提供服务,实现了全民医保。一个运作良好的 UCS 应该在卫生服务的使用和政府卫生补贴的分配方面实现卫生公平目标。考虑到这些目标,本文评估了与富有的 UCS 成员相比,政府卫生预算惠及穷人的规模和趋势。
利用 2003 年至 2009 年期间具有全国代表性的家庭调查“健康与福利调查”进行受益情况分析。UCS 成员根据资产指数和财富五分位数分为五个不同的社会经济地位组。
2003 年,用于公立医院和卫生设施的联合门诊(OP)和住院(IP)服务的政府补贴总额(扣除直接家庭支付额后)从 300 亿泰铢(10 亿美元)增加到 2004-2009 年的 400-460 亿泰铢。2003 年,在属于全国最贫困和最富裕五分之一人口的 UCS 成员中,OP 服务的公共补贴份额分别为 28%和 7%,对于 IP 服务,份额分别为 27%和 6%。这反映了公共卫生补贴向医疗保健的倾斜。在随后的几年里,OP 和 IP 公共补贴仍然对穷人有利。贫困人口的受益情况是由最贫困的五分之一比最富裕的五分之一更高的利用率决定的,尤其是在卫生中心和地区医院。因此,最贫困的 UCS 成员对公共设施的家庭直接卫生支付的概率和金额都低于最富裕的成员。
更广泛的卫生服务基础设施(特别是在地区一级)的地理覆盖范围、充足的资金和有效的初级保健、综合福利套餐以及服务点的零共付额,促进了贫困人口的更高利用率和更好的财务风险保护,使他们受益。