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Health Care System in Taiwan

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Peony CHENG, Dicky CHIU, Dick FOK, Peter KONG, Dorothy LAM, Timothy LUI, Amy WU ... agent pump, liver and lung transplantation in payment standard (1998 to 1999) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Care System in Taiwan


1
Health Care System in Taiwan Measures Policies
  • Group Members
  • Peony CHENG, Dicky CHIU, Dick FOK, Peter KONG,
    Dorothy LAM, Timothy LUI, Amy WU

2
Presentation Outline
  • Capacity Building Peter
  • Access Timothy
  • Cost Containment Peony
  • Efficiency Dorothy
  • Quality Assurance Dicky
  • Further Coverage Dicky
  • Questions Answers

3
CAPACITY BUILDING
4
Establishment of Medical Care Network
  • The start of capacity building
  • DOH initiated in1985 completed in 2000
  • 15 years, 3 phases project
  • Better distribution of medical resources
  • Divided into 17 regions, 63 sub-regions

5
Medical Care Network
  • Phase One Two
  • 10 years (1985 1995)
  • Develop primary secondary care
  • Encourage private investment in rural and
    mountain areas
  • Phase 3
  • 5 years (1996 2000)
  • Rehabilitation
  • Long Term Care
  • Psychiatric care
  • Quality assurance

6
Medical Care Network
  • Goals of the Project By 2000
  • 13.3 physician /10,000
  • 35 hospital bed / 10,000
  • 10 psychiatric bed / 10,000
  • 35.2 nursing home bed / 10,000 elderly
  • Health Status At 2000
  • 15 physicians /10,000
  • 56.8 hospital beds / 10,000
  • 6.7 psychiatric beds / 10,000
  • 507 nursing homes for 14094 elderly

7
Number of Health Personnel Per 10,000 Population
Physicians
Dentists
8
Number of Health Personnel Per 10,000 Population
Pharmacists
Nurses
9
Primary Care
  • Clinics
  • Western and TCM mix
  • Majority privately operated Western
  • NHI contracted 88 of private clinics
  • Public operates in rural and mountain areas
  • 368 health stations
  • 500 health rooms

10
Primary Care
Clinics
11
Primary Care
  • Dental Care
  • 100 privately operate
  • NHI contracted 97

12
Secondary / Tertiary Care
  • Hospital
  • Western and TCM mix
  • Majority privately operated Western
  • NHI contracted 90 of private
    hospitals
  • Including teaching hospitals
    and tertiary care

13
Secondary / Tertiary Care
  • Hospital
  • 602 private 85552 beds
  • 98 public 40924 beds
  • 56.76 beds per 10,000 people

14
Secondary / Tertiary Care
Hospital Bed
15
Preventive Care/Early Detection
  • Children Health
  • Free vaccinations to infant/ children
  • Hap B, poliomyelitis, measles, mumps, rubella,
    Japanese encephalitis, tuberculosis, diphtheria,
    pertusis, tetanus
  • 6 health examinations for infant/children up to 3
    years old
  • Starting from 1998, complete health record for
    all elementary school student

16
Preventive Care/Early Detection
  • Vision check up for age up to 5 years old
  • Myopia
  • Strabismus
  • Amblyopia
  • Pre / Post Natal Care
  • 10 free pre-natal screening
  • Congenital metabolic disorder
  • Thelasemia

17
Preventive Care/Early Detection
  • Adult / Geriatric Health
  • Preventive screening
  • 40-64 once/3 years
  • 65 once a year
  • Cancer Control
  • Cervical Cancer
  • Annual Pap test for women age 30

18
Preventive Care/Early Detection
  • Breast Cancer
  • 1993 started education on self examination
  • 2000 provided/conducted breast palpation to women
    30
  • Oral Cancer
  • 2000, started checking 500,000 habitual betel nut
    (??) chewers for oral cancer and precancerous
    lesions

19
Preventive Care/Early Detection
  • Occupational Disease
  • 6 occupational health centers
  • Diagnosis, treatment, follow ups, assessment
  • In 2000, 428 medical institutions for detection
    of black lung disease
  • Free HIV screening treatment

20
Rehabilitation
  • 147 hospitals for drug rehab
  • 46 psychiatric rehab centers

21
Long Term Care
  • 1996
  • 91767 (5.34) of 1.69 million elderly unable to
    attend daily life
  • Report of status of elderly issued by the
    Ministry of Interior
  • 1998
  • Department of Health issued a 3 year plan for
    long term care of the Elderly
  • Budget of NT1.1 billion
  • 10000 beds for the elderly

22
Long Term Care
  • DOH Strategies 6 providing 1 financing
  • Establish effective channels medical care
    social resources
  • Provide dependent elderly their families with
    assistance
  • Provide government funding consolidate private
    sectors and hospitals
  • Encourage establishment of more nursing home
  • Develop manpower for LTC
  • Increase community care resources encourage
    home care
  • Plan for LTC insurance

23
Long Term Care
  • Elderly
  • Chronically ill require home care
  • 299 hospitals provide the service for 672,032
    person-cases
  • Nursing Caring homes
  • 507 institutions providing care for 14,094
    persons
  • Day Care centers
  • 19 centers providing care for 245,677 person-cases

24
Long Term Care
  • Cancer Care
  • Sun Yat-sen Cancer Center provides home care for
    patients
  • Chronic Patient
  • 8 chronic hospitals

25
Access
  • Removable of Geographical Barrier
  • Removable of Financial Barrier

26
Removable of barriers ( Geographical )
  • Health station
  • Residents in mountain areas and offshore
    islands rely heavily on local health
    stations and health
    rooms
  • No. of health station in Taiwan (mountain area )
    368 (49)
  • No. of health room in Taiwan ( mountain area )
    503 (200)
  • Health stations are community-oriented and form
    the basis of primary health care ( e.g. general
    outpatient treatment, emergency medical care,
    educational programs, family planning and
    prevention )
  • All health stations in mountain regions have the
    standard diagnosis, treatment, testing, X-ray and
    ambulance equipment.

27
Removable of barriers ( Geographical )
  • Mobile medical team
  • Since 1979, the government has been sending
    mobile medical team to remote villages on the
    regular basis
  • In 1995, a boat was built for mobile medical
    treatment
  • In 1996, helicopter landing pad
    was built in some remote areas
    to improve local emergency care

28
Removable of barriers ( Geographical )
  • NHI
  • Adjust payment by increasing the diagnosis and
    treatment fee for doctors and lowering the fee
    for residents in order to increase the healthcare
    accessibility in remote areas
  • Telecommunications medical care network
  • Established since 1989, 145 points of service in
    various remote areas in 1995
  • Teaching hospitals, medical centers and regional
    hospital have joined the network and provide
    services to health stations in remote areas
  • Provide medical personnel with educational and
    training opportunities

29
Removable of barriers ( Financial )
  • NHI / Insurance Premium
  • Premium Relief Fund is to assist public with
    financial difficulties to pay insurance premium
    by providing non-interest bearing loan
  • Labor insurance will pay the premiums for those
    people who are unemployed
  • Under the insurance premium contribution,
    category 5 ( Low-income group )
    do not need to pay the premium
  • People who age above 70 do not
    need to pay the premium
  • Some charity parities can offer assistance for
    those people who are unable to pay the premium

30
Removable of barriers ( Financial )
  • NHI / Exemptions of co-payment
  • Catastrophic diseases
  • The catastrophic diseases, such as, cancer,
    chronic mental illness, haemodialysis
    congenital illness. These illnesses involve
    medical expenses too high for an average family
    to afford
  • Child delivery
  • Preventive health services
  • Medical services offered at
    remote areas
  • Low-income households
  • Veterans

31
Cost-Containment
  • Supply-side Strategies
  • Global budgets
  • Payment systems
  • Administrative controls
  • Demand-side Strategies
  • Co-payment

32
Supply side strategies
  • Global budgets
  • Dental global budgets (1998)
  • Chinese medicine (2000)
  • Office-based ambulatory care (2001)
  • Hospital (2002)

33
Supply side strategies
  • Payment systems
  • Include laparoscopic surgery, home
    iron-discharging agent pump, liver and lung
    transplantation in payment standard (1998 to
    1999)
  • Case payment system of 50 like DRGs
  • Some pilot projects of capitation payment in
    remote area and outlying islands
  • Drugs payment systems

34
Supply side strategies
  • Administrative controls
  • Penalties on healthcare providers proven to
    misuse medical resources
  • Holds regular audits and
    reviews on various projects
    and announces major violations

35
Demand side strategies
  • Co-payment of hospitalization
  • Co-payment rate is 5 to 30, with higher
    co-payment rate for longer duration of
    hospitalization
  • Upper ceiling for the entire
    calendar year is NT 40,000 (10
    of average national income)
    in 2002

36
Demand side strategies
  • Co-payment for outpatient services
  • Additional co-payment on drug expenses, frequent
    users and rehabilitation therapy from 1999 to
    2001
  • Pharmaceutical co-payment max. NT 200
  • Freq. user co-payment max. NT 100
  • Physical rehab. co-payment max. NT 210
  • Increase co-payment in academic and regional
    hospital on Sept 1 2002
  • Regional hospital - from NT100 to NT140
  • Academic hospital - from NT150 to NT210
  • Co-payment for lab exam increased from 0 to
    max. NT300

37
Efficiency
  • Use of IT
  • Contracting Out
  • Competition

38
Use of IT (1)
  • Digital accreditation procedures
  • BNHI set up the cross-branch operation at one
    counter system
  • NHI internet
  • Voice service systems
  • National Health Insurance IC
    Card

39
Use of IT (2)
  • On-line data exchange of all banks
  • Search functions for important medical orders in
    various medical institution via internet
  • Broadband Networks for NHI
    network

40
Use of IT (3)
  • Electronic patient records and medical
    information standards
  • Develop major health care information
    applications
  • Filmless environment
  • Internal Management Document Mgt, Personnel
    Mgt, Admin Support Mgt.

41
Contracting Out (1)
  • Dec. 2000, there were 16,332 contracted
    healthcare providers

42
Contracting Out (2)
  • contracted pharmacies stood at 3,061
  • contracted medical laboratories
    numbered 230
  • contracted midwifery clinics numbered 18
  • contracted community psychiatric rehabilitation
    facilities numbered 38
  • contracted home care institutions (including home
    care services) numbered 304
  • a total number of 19,983 contracted healthcare
    providers to meet different demands from the
    public

43
Contracting Out (2)
  • 113,821 beds provided by NHI contracted
    healthcare providers
  • 88.2 were acute beds, 11.8 are chronic beds
  • By the end of 2001, 16,558 medical institutions
  • Now 96.5 of all private and public
    medical care institutions have
    signed contract with the National
    Health Insurance .

44
Competition (1)
  • Price
  • Absence of sufficient price competition
  • External
  • Lack of external competition

45
Competition (2)
  • Great Internal competition
  • Under fee-for-service (FFS) medicine, the more
    clinicians do, the more money they make.
  • Over 16,000 contracted health care providers
  • Great demand for better hospital services
    economic growth
  • Increase competitiveness and improve service
    quality by ISO, focusing group, customer
    satisfaction survey

46
Quality Assurance
47
Quality assurance in Taiwan
  • Accreditation of quality of medical schools
  • Reform of medical
    education small group teaching
    and problem- based learning
    (PBL)
  • Problem arises
  • ? disparities in the content of medical education
    between different medical school

48
Quality assurance in Taiwan
  • Need to have objective
    measure of the quality of
    medical education.
  • Call for the development
    of systematic method of
    accreditation of medical
    schools by the Ministry of Education (MOE)
    in 1997.
  • Accreditation is done by National Health Research
    Institute (NHRI) since 1999.

49
Quality assurance in Taiwan
  • Evaluation criteria
  • Design and implementation
    of the curriculum
  • Content of curriculum
  • Evaluation of students
    academic performance
  • Student recruitment, academic counseling, career
    planning and the overall learning environment
  • Utilization of teaching resources funding,
    general facility, teaching facility, library and
    resources of clinical education.
  • Website www.nhri.org.tw

50
Quality assurance in Taiwan
  • Hospital accreditation
  • Launched in 1978
  • to upgrade the quality of medical care,
  • to identify well-organized clinical training
    institutions for medical students and residents.
  • Senior physicians, nurses,
    pharmacists and hospital
    management specialists
    visit and assess hospitals
    based on a set of standards
    and operational procedures.

51
Quality assurance in Taiwan
  • Hospital accreditation
  • Evaluation on the basis of the quality of
    personnel, facilities, hospital management,
    community services and the quality of medical
    care in various departments.
  • Valid for 3 years and then apply for
    reassessment.
  • By the end of 2000, 497 hospitals are qualified

52
Quality assurance in Taiwan
  • Licensing for clinics
  • Not subject to accreditation
  • Apply for an operating license
  • Requirements are set by local health station
  • Subject to periodic inspection by local health
    station personnel
  • Must be passed for the clinics to renew their
    licences.

53
Knowledge management in Taiwan
  • Background of the development of e-health
    learning
  • Medical resources are unequally distributed.
  • Top 10 medical centers ¼ national health
    expenditure
  • Rural areas medical resources and medical
    manpower are under-distributed.
  • Why medical personnel reluctant to practice in
    rural areas ? (Chen, et al, 2001)
  • Afraid of isolation.
  • Lack of chance to receive continuing medical
    education.

54
Knowledge management in Taiwan
  • Why e-health learning is needed in rural area in
    Taiwan?
  • Medical resources poorly distributed
  • Quality of consultation referral need
    improvement
  • Peer communication among healthcare providers
    difficult
  • Need to provide continuing medical education
    online
  • Elderly, handicapped terminal ill patients
    convenient way to provide special healthcare at
    home

55
Knowledge management in Taiwan
  • Development of e-health in Taiwan began under the
    National Information Infrastructure (NII)
  • Major progress in NII development
  • Distance education
  • Teleconsultation
  • Video-on-demand
  • Electronic library

56
Knowledge management in Taiwan

Video-conferencing Case library

E-journal Video On Demand (VOD)
57
Knowledge management in Taiwan
  • Videoconferencing provides face to face teaching
    and learning in real time between teacher and
    students
  • Case library application of telecommunication
    technique to ? clinicians effort and time in
    continuing medical education
  • E-journal Chinese full-text journal
  • Video on demand (VOD) virtual classroom
    providing web-based distance learning course with
    teaching materials

58
Standardization of clinical protocol
  • Prevent the abuse use of medical services as well
    as misuse of budget, BMHI specify a list of
    treatment for different kinds of illness
  • Treatment not listed must be
    approved by BNHI.
  • Ensure that the patient
    obtained same treatment no
    matter which hospital they go.

59
Further Coverage
60
Further coverage in Taiwan
  • Catastrophic coverage
  • NHI has covered over 96 of population in Taiwan,
    so the private insurance is said to be
    insignificant.
  • Well cover In 921 earthquake, all patients would
    be waived of co-payment.
  • still purchase personal health insurance.
  • Fear that the national health insurance policy do
    not cover all kinds of catastrophic illness.
  • Conditions qualifying as catastrophic illness
    under NHI (www.cens.com.tw)
  • Cancer, congenital abnormality of coagulation
    factors, severe anemia, chronic uremia,
    generalized autoimmune syndrome requiring
    lifelong treatment, chronic psychiatric disorder
    .

61
Further coverage in Taiwan
  • Foreign insurance companies in Taiwan
  • Currently, there are 14 U.S. insurance companies
    in Taiwan insurance market.
  • They put more effort on educating clients about
    their coverage and meet the particular needs of
    their client.
  • Catastrophic disease insurance programs are
    expected to be more popular in future. (Chou,
    1999)

62
Questions Answers
63
Reference
  • Website
  • www.gio.gov.tw
  • www.dgbas.gov.tw
  • www.doh.gov.tw
  • www.nhi.gov.tw
  • Public Health in Taiwan R.O.C., Department of
    Health, Republic of China, August 1997
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