Health Policy and Planning, 34, 2019, i1–i3
doi: 10.1093/heapol/czz098
Editorial
Transforming health systems financing in Lower
Mekong: making sure the poor are not left
behind
Augustine D Asante1,*, Bart Jacobs2,3 and Virginia Wiseman4,5
1
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Samuels Building,
Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia, 2Social Health Protection Programme, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale
Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), #2 Street 289, Toul Kork, PO BOX 1238, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 3Social Health Protection
Network P4H #2 Street 289, Toul Kork, PO BOX 1238, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 4Department of Global Health and
Tropical Medicine, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15–17 Tavistock Pl, Kings Cross, London
WC1H 9SH, UK and 5Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Wallace Wurth Building, High St,
Kensington, NSW 2052, Australia
*Corresponding author. School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales (UNSW)
Sydney, Samuels Building, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia. E-mail:
[email protected]
Accepted on 27 August 2019
Introduction
Equitable health financing systems are considered fundamental to the
achievement of universal health coverage (UHC) and health targets
under the sustainable development goals (SDGs) (Hosseinpoor et al.,
2018). Over the last decade, many low- and middle-income countries
(LMICs) have made significant changes to their health financing systems to accelerate progress towards UHC. However, equitable financing—defined here as ensuring that the burden of paying for healthcare
is in accordance with ability-to-pay and benefits from health spending
are distributed on the basis of need (Tangcharoensathien et al.,
2015)—is far from inevitable and countries face considerable challenges in ensuring that the poor and disadvantaged are not left behind.
Countries in the Lower Mekong Region (LMR) in South-East Asia
provide an ideal setting for exploring such challenges, not least because of the dominant and expanding role of the private health sector
and the different pace at which these countries are developing from a
social and economic perspective (Cook and Pincus, 2014). This supplement shares lessons for health financing based on the experiences
of three countries in the Lower Mekong Region—Cambodia, Lao
PDR (Laos) and Myanmar. While each country has made a clear commitment to UHC, there are different social, political and economic circumstances that influence the path they have chosen to reach this goal.
This type of context-specific evidence is critical for the design of equitable health financing systems that protect everyone, rich and poor
(Tangcharoensathien et al., 2011).
Health financing in the Lower Mekong Region
Health financing in the three countries is characterized by high
out-of-pocket (OOP) spending—averaging 50–60% of total health
expenditure (World Bank, 2018). Vulnerability to OOP spending
and poor access to healthcare in the region has many causes,
including limited availability of health services to deal with emerging health conditions like chronic non-communicable diseases, ageing and disability (Meyer et al., 2013; Kien et al., 2016). Even
where health services are available, factors such as geographical
barriers, costs and acceptability by the population tend to prevent
many from using services when needed (Jacobs et al., 2012). In the
three study countries, the vast majority of the population, especially those in the informal sector (the so-called ‘missing middle’) do
not enjoy any form of financial risk protection, unlike formal sector employees who are covered by social health insurance, or poor
people who receive tax-based assistance in the form of fee waivers
(Bredenkamp et al., 2015). Other segments of the population are
covered by various social health protection schemes that often
cover a limited range of health services, leaving beneficiaries still
exposed to financial hardship when accessing healthcare
(Shahrawat and Rao, 2012).
While health financing systems in the study countries have
developed differently, shaped by country-specific circumstances,
over time they have converged on similar strategies to extend access
and financial protection. Table 1 provides an overview of healthfinancing schemes in the three study countries.
Content of this supplement
All four papers in this supplement evaluate the degree of equity in
health financing, albeit from different angles. Two papers (Asante
et al. and Nagpal et al.) explore the benefit incidence of health
financing. Asante et al. focus on the distribution of healthcare
benefits across different socioeconomic groups in Cambodia. They
report, among other things, that the benefits from health spending
C The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
V
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Health Policy and Planning, 2019, Vol. 34, Suppl. 1
Table 1. Overview of health financing schemes in the three study countries
Item
Population (2016)
Population living below the
national poverty line
2006–17 (%)
OOP payments as a % of
current health expenditure
Health financing scheme
Benefit package
Scheme coverage
Country
Cambodia
Lao PDR
Myanmar
15.8 million
17.7
6.8 million
23.4
52.9 million
32.1
59.4
45.5
73.9
Health Equity Fund (HEF) for the
poor; started in 2000 followed by
nationwide expansion in 2015
Social Health insurance for formal
private-sector employees; started
in 2016 and for civil servants
since 2018
State Authority for Social Security
(SASS) for civil servants; started
in 1995
Social security organization (SSO)
for private employees; started in
2001
Community-Based Health Insurance
(CBHI) for non-poor people in the
informal sector; started in 2002
HEF for the poor; started in 2004.
Outpatient and inpatient services,
except HEF that also covers travel
and food costs for inpatients.
Social health insurance scheme or
Social Security Scheme (SSS) for
state enterprise employees, civil
servants and employees of public
and private firms with five or
more employees; started in 1956.
Outpatient and inpatient services
with food stipends and transport
reimbursement for hospitalized
patients under HEF
About 28% of the total population
was covered by these schemes in
2018 (i.e. 4 million people).
About 27.2% of the population was
covered by these schemes in 2014.
Outpatient and inpatient plus
medicine, laboratory and transportation in case of referral
outside urban areas.
About 3% of the eligible population
was covered by the scheme in
2014.
OOP, out-of-pocket.
Sources: World Health Organization (2018); World Bank (2018); Myint et al. (2018); and Sydavong et al. (2019).
in the public sector in Cambodia are generally distributed in
favour of the poor, reflecting the level of need for health services.
The authors also note that over 50% of total health expenditure and
healthcare delivery remains with the private sector which distributes
healthcare benefits in favour of the rich. Given the significant
proportion of poor Cambodians who use private providers, it will
be difficult for Cambodia to achieve UHC if this challenge is not
comprehensively addressed.
Nagpal et al. examine the effect of a free universal maternal and
child health scheme implemented by the Laos government on equity
of access to health services and financial protection. Financial protection is measured in terms of the ability to access free healthcare at
the point of delivery—with special emphasis on ethnic minority
women. Evidence from this article points to persistent and large
inequities in access and financial protection that cannot be ignored.
Significant differences were also observed in the utilization of health
services by economic status and ethnicity. These inequities are
accentuated by issues related to the distribution and nature of
human resources, supply-side readiness and quality of care provided
across different geographical areas.
The remaining two papers examine the effects of paying for
healthcare. The paper by Por et al. takes a closer look at the effects
of OOP spending at the individual level in Cambodia, using distress
financing (borrowing with interest to pay for healthcare) as an
indicator of financial hardship. Their findings suggest that a large
proportion of Cambodian households experience distress financing
and a key determinant of this is household poverty, even for households covered by the HEF. Finally, Ergo and colleagues explore the
consequences of relying excessively on OOP spending as the main
source of health financing. The authors use the most recent nationally representative survey, the 2015 Myanmar Poverty and Living
Conditions Survey, that also includes the first data on health
expenditure in conflict-affected areas. This article indicates that a
substantial number of households in Myanmar, many of whom are
already living below the national poverty line, experience catastrophic and further impoverishing health care payments. The coping mechanisms adopted by these households include borrowing and
selling of household assets while a substantial proportion do not
seek care at all as a cost-saving measure.
Lessons emerging from this supplement
Together, these papers demonstrate that while progress has been
made, there is still much to be done if UHC is to become a reality in
the three LMR countries, not least because of limited financial risk
protection; high utilization of private health facilities; and the borrowing and selling of household assets to cope with the high OOP
expenditure.
There is little doubt that governments in the LMR are making
efforts to protect their citizens against impoverishing healthcare
spending. All of them have committed to UHC and are restructuring
their health financing systems to expand coverage along with financial protection. However, the level of protection currently offered to
the poor and other vulnerable groups is insufficient to achieve the
goal of UHC. All three country case-studies show that a large proportion of the population still incurring high OOP expenditure
when accessing healthcare. Existing social protection schemes do
not appear to be comprehensive enough, partly because of limited
domestic funding for these schemes. Despite rapid economic growth,
countries in the LMR face numerous economic challenges that affect
their ability to mobilize domestic revenue. With national budgets
stretched to the limit, these countries and many other LMICs,
are unable to allocate sufficient funds to expand social assistance
interventions (OECD, 2013).
Health Policy and Planning, 2019, Vol. 34, Suppl. 1
In the absence of a sufficiently funded, carefully designed and
implemented public health system, the private sector is shown to
flourish in the LMR. In both Cambodia and Myanmar, private providers operate in a minimally regulated environment but are deemed
more responsive to patient needs and demands than the public sector, accounting for a large proportion of service utilization. Since
most OOP spending occurs in this sector, it is paramount that strategies are developed to regulate and monitor their activities, especially in the areas of service quality and fee-setting. The high OOP
expenditure associated with the private sector often result from poor
quality of treatment or supplier-induced demand that exposes users
to unnecessary costs (Hanson et al., 2008; Morgan et al., 2016).
Although there is no ‘magic bullet’ in terms of how best to engage
the private sector in a resource-constrained environment, a strong
public system appears to enable improved service delivery by the private sector (Morgan et al., 2016; Clarke et al., 2018; Binagwaho
and Ghebreyesus, 2019).
A key consequence of the high OOP expenditure and limited financial risk protection in the three countries is the harmful practice
of borrowing and selling household assets. This borrowing is
encouraged by the easy access to finance from private financial institutions. For example, in Cambodia, loans are easily accessible from
numerous banks and microfinance institutions and it is not uncommon for people to borrow just to pay the interest on outstanding
loans (Bylander et al., 2019). Papers in this special supplement highlight the need for improved regulation of the private finance industry
including closer monitoring of the terms and conditions for loans
from these institutions, especially the long loan repayment periods.
Many respondents in the study by Por and colleagues had not paid
off the loans they had taken out a year or more prior to the study. In
Myanmar, as Ergo et al. observe, foregoing health care altogether
because of financial barriers was a common coping strategy, especially by those unable to access finance.
As countries focus on increasing coverage, it is paramount that
the poor and vulnerable—who are often the most difficult to
reach—are not left behind. This supplement reminds us that without
adequate focus on equity, it may be some time before the benefits of
UHC trickle down to everyone.
Acknowledgements
This supplement was supported by the Australian Government through the
Australian Research Council’s Discovery Projects funding scheme (project
DP150101321) with co-funding from the Deutsche Gesellschaft für
Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) through the Social Health Protection
Network P4H. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and are
not necessarily those of the Australian Government or Australian Research
Council, GIZ or P4H.
Conflicts of interest statement. None declared.
Ethical approval. National Ethics Committee for Health Research in
Cambodia (REF: 362 NECHR) University of New South Wales (REF:
HC1543).
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