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Health Reform in Kazakhstan: problems and solutions

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Title: Health Reform in Kazakhstan: problems and solutions


1
Health Reform in Kazakhstan problems and
solutions
  • Meruert Rakhimova, MD, MPH
  • UNFPA Kazakhstan
  • 02.11.2006

2
Presentation Outline
  • 1. About Kazakhstan
  • 2. Health system overview pros cons
  • 3. Health reform a menu for solutions
  • Policy management
  • Health economics financing
  • Services - primary health care (PHC)
  • 4. Research interest

3
The Republic of Kazakhstan
4
The Republic of Kazakhstan
  • Territory - 2,724,900 km2
  • Population - 15,233,244 (July 2006 est.)
  • Population density 5.4 person / 1 km2
  • GDP (purchasing power parity) - 124.3 billion
    (2005 est.)
  • GDP (real growth rate) - 9.2 (2005 est.)
  • GDP (per capita (PPP) - 8,200 (2005 est.)

5
The Republic of Kazakhstan
  • Life expectancy at birth (2006 est.) -
  • total population 66.89 years male 61.56 years
    female 72.52 years
  • Infant mortality rate 33.5/1,000 life births
  • Maternal mortality rate 80/100,000 life births

6
Life Expectancy at Birth, 1995 - 2003
7
Crude death rate per 1,000 persons
10,5
10,4
10,2
10,2
10,2
12
10,1
10,1
10
9,8
9,7
9,5
9,2
10
8,1
8
8
6
4
2
0
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
8
Major Causes of Mortality(1992-2004, per 100,000
persons)
9
Health System in KZ
Policy Administration Control


10
Health System Generic Functions
  • Management/monitoring
  • Financing
  • Service provision
  • Resources mobilization

11
Challenges to Health Systems Conceptual
Framework
Intermediate Goals
Final Goals
Means
A
B
C
  • Changes in
  • Regulation
  • Financing-Pooling
  • Purchasing
  • Delivery Models

Health Status
Equity Access
Effectiveness Quality
Financial Risk Protection
Financial sustainability
Efficiency Productivity
Social responsiveness
Satisfaction
12
Health System in KZ before 2005
Management/monitoring
  • Lack of strategic vision of how system should
    develop
  • Unclear delegation of authority in
    /centralization decentralization/ system
  • Fragmented and controversial legislation
  • Vertical control hinders integration of services
  • Complicated heterogeneous infrastructure
  • Poor capacity of health care managers

13
Health System in KZ before 2005 Financing and
assignations
  • Low financing of sector as of GDP and of
    state budget subsidy (7.3)
  • Irrational (not needs based) allocations
  • Dubious criteria for allotment package of
    universally covered health services undefined
  • Asymmetry in funding of different provinces
    poor provinces get low budgetary appropriation
  • Significant amount of direct cash payment
    burden for people, limiting access to services

14
Total Health expenditure as of GDP
  • Goal 4 of GDP by 2010

15
International Comparison as GDP on Health
16
Health System in KZ before 2005Services
  • Fragmented Primary Health Care (PHC)
  • Complicated organizational structure of hospitals
    and specialized care facilities
  • Access and quality of services

17
Health System in KZ before 2005Resources
  • Poor planning of health institution staffing
  • Disastrous condition of health premises and
    utility supply in many provinces
  • Obsoleteness of medical equipment and inadequate
    maintenance
  • General scarcity of medications in hospitals
  • Standard clinical practice - protocols/guidelines
    not in use

18
At a Glance
  • Drugs are too expensive, sporadically available
  • General over-medicalization of care
  • Changes in use of inputs not always linked to
    long-term policy reforms
  • Eg. Medical equipment is often purchased without
    any needs assessment or cost-effectiveness
    analysis
  • Accountability status often unclear

19
What was Good
  • Academic training capacity in place
  • Regulations (de juro) in place
  • Decentralized structure of health sector
  • Private practice allowed
  • Private health insurance companies on the market
  • Drug safety rigorous drug registration
    development of the National Pharmacopoeia
  • Critical mass of PHC providers trained and
    practicing
  • Legal status conducive for practicing family
    medicine
  • Family medicine recognized as specialty

20
The 2005-2010 Health Reform
Towards competitive Kazakhstan, competitive
economy, competitive nation! (N. Nazarbaev, 2004)
  • Objectives
  • To share responsibility for health between state
    and patient
  • To shift health care delivery to PHC
  • To introduce new model of health management and
    health information system (HIS)
  • To strengthen maternal and child health
  • To control spread of socially significant
    diseases
  • To reform medical education system.

21
The 2005-2010 Health Reform
  • 2-stage process
  • Stage 1 2005-2007 building a ground for long
    term development of the health sector
  • setting up minimum standards for the guaranteed
    benefits package
  • working with the population to promote healthy
    lifestyle
  • transferring focus from in-patient to primary
    health care
  • separating PHC from in-patient services both
    financially and administratively
  • strengthening material/technical base of health
    facilities, primarily PHC
  • establishing a system of independent audit to
    ensure quality medical care

22
The 2005-2010 Health Reform
  • Stage 2 2008-2010 scaling up of stage 1.
  • Introducing fundamental reform of the medical
    education system
  • Transforming PHC by strengthening the general
    practice
  • A complete basic modernization of the health care
    system, staff trainings, implementation of new
    technologies, a management and quality control
    system and a unified information system
  • The improvement of coordination in health sector,
    and building a solid foundation for
    competitiveness in the health care system  

23
Inter-sectoral approach to public health
protection
  • National Coordination Council under the
    Government of Kazakhstan multisectoral
    multidisciplinary body
  • Wide use of mass media for promotion information
    on disease prevention and healthy lifestyles
  • Involvement of civil society organizations
    (health organization associations, professional
    associations of physicians, patients) - feedback
    on quality of care and patient satisfaction,
    provision of independent expertise of health
    services, certification of specialists,
    accreditation.

24
The case to study the lesson to learn
  • Nosocomial pediatric HIV outbreak in South
    Kazakhstan march 2006
  • 78 children infected via (unnecessary) blood
    transfusion
  • Fired Minister of Health, head of Quality
    Control Committee, head of Rep. AIDS Center, head
    of local health department, mayor of SK province,
    head of local QCC
  • New Blood Bank, new childrens hospital, first
    clinical/research center for treatment of
    HIV/AIDS.

25
Health Care Management
26
Improvement in Health Care Management System
  • Rational delineation of functions and authority
  • Improvement of health care quality control
  • Improvement of health financing system
  • Drug provision
  • Health Information System (HIS)
  • Training of pool of health care managers

27
Delineation of functions and authorities
Central executive body MoH
Local health management bodies Province Health
Departments
  • Implementation of national policy
  • Executive functions (implementation of actions
    ensuring equal access to basic services all over
    the country, setting up the standards of their
    provision, planning sector development,
    development of a regulatory framework)
  • Regulatory functions (control of policy
    implementation, control of implementation of
    national, sector programs, accreditation of
    health organizations, enforcement functions)

Health organizations
  • Control over providing direct general services
    to the population, licensing of most types of
    medical and pharmaceutical activities,
    procurement of drugs excluding vaccines
  • Independence in the issues of
  • Material and technical base strengthening
  • Distribution of funds saved by health facilities
  • Differentiated staff remuneration to ensure
    motivation and others

28

 
Guaranteed Basic Benefit Package
Primary Health Care
In-Patient Care (emergency and planned)
Prevention Promotion of healthy
lifestyle vaccinations medical examinations
with some social diseases (TB, cancer, necrology,
psychiatry, diabetes etc.)
Referral by PHC staff
Drug provision under the list of essential drugs
Regulation of length of stay
Able population (18-63 years-old)
Children
Socially vulnerable groups
Diagnostics
Children under 5
Treatment of patients in in-patient replacement
facilities
  Except
with some chronic diseases recorded in D
registrar (50)
Beneficial drug provision to patients
Medical rehabilitation
Treatment of diseases related to unhealthy
lifestyles, irresponsible attitude towards
preventive medical examinations and dispensary.
Dispensary of chronic patients
pregnant with anemia and iodine deficiencies
Special care at referral by PHC staff
Highly specialized and rehabilitation care
emergency care, medical rehabilitation, medical
care in disasters, health care for HIV/AIDS
patients
For emergency care
29
Health Care Quality Control
2005 2010
2004
  • 1. National control
  • quality indicators
  • standards
  • accreditation
  • overall monitoring (PHC, in-patient, polyclinics,
    emergency care)
  • 2. Internal control
  • Standard quality provision of medical services
  • Ensuring compliance of medical services with
    common protocols
  • Equipment of health facilities with the automated
    management system under IIS
  • 3. Independent expertise (NGO)
  • establishment of NGO network
  • involvement in certification of medical staff
  • increased doctors responsibility
  • Review and evaluation of the quality of medical
    services and a study of peoples satisfaction
    with medical services
  • Determination of compliance with services
    provided by the treatment standards used in the
    facility
  • Medical services quality evaluation is restricted
    to medical facilities
  • Proposals for rectification of defects of medical
    services are of advise character
  • Internal quality control is not systematized and
    is not applied everywhere
  • Coverage of quality control is limited to the
    in-patient level

30
Health Financing
31
Main findings on the financing and budgeting study
  • Resource allocation rules are not oriented to
    population health needs and risk of illness.
  • Spending is not allocated to most cost-effective
    interventions.
  • No clear budgeting rules across provinces.
  • Budget structure does not allow for the clear
    separation of primary care expenditures, versus
    secondary and hospital care.

32
Main findings on the financing and budgeting study
  • No common budget structure across provinces leads
    to difficulty in comparing spending.
  • Capital spending is very low and is crowded out
    by spending on salaries and other expenses.
  • Spending on drugs is not standardized to a unique
    formula and drug prices are not referenced.

33
Improvement of Funding System
  • Introduction of single payer in the face of local
    (province) authority
  • Providers public and private health facilities
  • Base salary increase for medical staff
  • Introduction of national system of quality
    monitoring and resource use efficiency
  • Stimulation of voluntary health insurance
  • Increasing attractiveness of the sector to
    private investment
  • Wide use of financial leasing
  • Leveling of tariffs for similar medical services
    between regions
  • Payment per case treated (outcome based)

34
Why Push for PHC?
35
Scope of Primary Care Practice
  • Diagnostic Therapeutic Care
  • Acute care
  • 24 hr coverage
  • Chronic disease management
  • Prescriptions
  • Psycho-social care
  • Specialty referrals
  • Worker health
  • Home-based care
  • Palliative
  • Pain management
  • Other symptoms
  • Coordination/Referrals
  • Nursing home care
  • Hospice

Dx and Therapeutic
Rehab
Preventive
  • Rehabilitation
  • Coordination/Referrals
  • Alcohol and drug
  • Physical therapy
  • Occupational therapy
  • Specialty referrals
  • Convalescent care
  • Preventive Services
  • Screening
  • Risk factor identification mgt.
  • Immunization
  • Well child care
  • Prevention counseling
  • Family Planning

Palliative
36
PHC Reform
As percentage of the health services financing
2004
In-patient care
PHC
PHC
In-patient care
2010
37
Challenges to Health Systems Conceptual
Framework
Intermediate Goals
Final Goals
Means
A
B
C
  • Changes in
  • Regulation
  • Financing-Pooling
  • Purchasing
  • Delivery Models

Health Status
Equity Access
Effectiveness Quality
Financial Risk Protection
Financial sustainability
Efficiency Productivity
Social responsiveness
Satisfaction
38
Assessing overall performance
  • Distribution of funds not allocated according to
    population needs.
  • In general people have access to health
    servicesbut
  • Geographic access to well developed PHC is
    limited and forces many rural people into
    hospitals as first line provider.
  • Financial access is a problem. Out-of-pocket
    payments, many times in excess of a monthly
    salary, keep 20 of all patients from obtaining
    required medical care.
  • Access to quality medical services in rural areas
    is impeded as years of under investment have
    eroded the technical capacity of providers.
  • Equity and Access

39
Assessing overall performance
  • Effectiveness and Quality
  • Observance of treatment protocols is limited. For
    example, only 50 of all suspected cases of
    eclampsia had blood pressure taken.
  • No monitoring system in place to track adherence
    to standard CPP/CPG
  • Over 50 percent of the 62 percent of neonatal
    deaths could be prevented.
  • Many of the neonatal deaths are due to a problems
    in management of high risk births, lack of EmOC
    or lack of timely access to PHC.
  • Very little activity related to promotion. PHC
    focused on minor palliative care.

40
Assessing overall performance
  • Overall level of financing health care in
    Kazakhstan is nearly the lowest in CAR and
    European countries. Most countries are spending
    over 5 percent of GDP
  • Maternal child health care services receive
    limited resources for true PHC.
  • Problems with risk pooling create a serious
    financial burden for the population. While
    majority of the population pays only a small
    amount per visit, hospitalization is a
    catastrophic risk.
  • Financing and sustainability

41
Assessing overall performance
  • Overall trends in health status are not
    improving.
  • Hospitals do not appear to be operating
    efficiently in terms of producing maximum output
    with minimum input.
  • PHC services are not capturing patients in rural
    areas (at least 25 went directly to hospitals).
  • Staff productivity is limited by low salary, lack
    of equipment, drugs and supplies.
  • Efficiency and productivity

42
Assessing overall performance
  • Satisfaction levels with care received are high
    (over 75 of all people very satisfied or
    satisfied with the doctor).
  • Very limited community participation in the
    oversight and planning associated with local
    government.
  • Need to introduce more outreach programsschool
    healthto improve information and education.
  • Satisfaction and community participation

43
RecommendationsTowards Strengthening PHC
44
Challenges to Health Systems Conceptual
Framework
Intermediate Goals
Final Goals
Means
A
B
C
  • Changes in
  • Regulation
  • Financing-Pooling
  • Purchasing
  • Delivery Models

Health Status
Equity Access
Effectiveness Quality
Financial Risk Protection
Financial sustainability
Efficiency Productivity
Social responsiveness
Satisfaction
45
Towards strengthening PHC
  • MOH has to strengthen regulation on quality of
    care.
  • Strengthen influence of local governments
  • Important to standardize performance indicators
    across provinces
  • Encourage benchmarking among providers and
    provinces
  • Need to strengthen health education and promotion.
  • Regulation
  • policy

46
Towards strengthening PHC
  • Introduce resource allocation formula that
    reflects the populations health needs and risks
  • Attempt to strengthen the capacity of PHC and
    increase the per capita financing PHC
  • Link transfer of funds and introduce performance
    based payment mechanisms that link funds to
    results
  • Reduce the financial burden for a basic benefit
    package.
  • Risk pooling at the national level is highly
    desirable.
  • Financing

47
Towards strengthening PHC
  • The introduction of the purchasing function
    critical to orient resources and actions in the
    sector.
  • Purchasing orients funds towards the populations
    priority health needs.
  • Heads of province HD and providers accountable
    for improvements in results.
  • Introduce performance based payments.
  • Strong monitoring and evaluation function related
    to productivity, quality and satisfaction.
  • Purchasing

48
Towards strengthening PHC
  • Orient PHC services to priority health problems
    and based on the top needs of population
  • Expand PHC package to other services -
    counseling, information sharing, promotion of
    healthy lifestyles, and not just palliative and
    curative care.
  • Standardize clinical care and encourage wide use
    of CPP/CPG at all levels of service delivery.
  • Training in key areas to fill the knowledge gap.
  • Delivery Model

49
Bibliography
  • State program on health reform 2005-2010, MoH,
    Astana, 2004.
  • MICS, 2006
  • MDGR, 2005
  • Mortality study, 2005
  • Kazakhstan InfoBase national indicators
  • Access and quality of care in Kazakhstan, UNICEF,
    UNFPA, 2005
  • The Dutch Model, N. Klazinga, D. Delnoij, I.K.
    Glasgow, Univ. of Amsterdam, Dec. 2001, p.44
  • Towards a sound system of medical insurance?
    Consumer driven health care reform in the
    Netherlands the relaxation of supply side
    restrictions and greater role of market forces,
    2002
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