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Health Sector Reform in South Africa

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Title: Health Sector Reform in South Africa


1

Health Sector Reform in South Africa
focus on the Supply Side issues Dr Brian Ruff
MB.BCh. FCP (SA)
2
Agenda
  • Introduction to health sector reform
  • Supply side issues
  • Possible responses reform experiences

3
Agenda
  • Introduction to health sector reform
  • Supply side issues
  • Possible responses reform experiences

4
Intro Health Sector value
  • 3 critical measures
  • Access
  • Equity
  • Efficiency
  • For society, there are always trade offs between
    these.
  • Economics 101
  • Demand control varies from being in individual
    consumers hands or may be concentrated in
    organisation or state hands
  • Supply of services is either private /
    independent or by the state
  • This paper explores these variables in regard to
  • the SA private health sector.

5
Intro Health Sector value
  • Definitions
  • Access ability of a sick person to gain entrée
    to the system to establish a diagnosis plan
    therapy. Also the ability to move between
    differing levels of the system i.e. primary care
    to specialist / highly specialised care. Funding
    is critical.
  • Equity provision of the same care based purely
    on their medical problem unaffected by income
    or influence.
  • Success is achieved when the demand side is
    controlled by structures / processes ensure
    effective demand. I.e.
  • Unnecessary care is denied (3rd party funding
    issue)
  • Necessary care is provided (both supplier induced
    demand, and denial of care is avoided)
  • Evaluation at an individual level is required.

6
Intro Health Sector value
  • Efficiency two definitions concern us
  • financial efficiency i.e. relative cost / price
  • quality
  • They may be combined as value.
  • On the Supply side, there are
  • trade offs between cost and quality
  • but in healthcare, over time, good quality is
    more cost effective than bad quality, since
    unresolved problems recur and incur new costs

7
Seven principles from McKinsey
Principles
actively manage demand for the healthcare
products and services
1. Prevent illness and injury
2. Ensure value conscious consumption of
services, treatments
To facilitate decisions that promote equity,
quality and cost effectiveness, and service
sustainability, a health care system leader or
intermediary must
3. Promote efficient creation of capacity for
labour, infrastructure, innovation
ensure that healthcare supply matches quantity,
quality and price demanded by the market
4. Safeguard the delivery of quality by providers
5. Promote cost competitiveness
6. Promote sustainable financing mechanisms to
collect and redistribute funds
7. Build and organise capabilities of
intermediaries to enable them to effectively
manage the system
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
8
Principles
1. Prevent illness and injury
  • Demand
  • Prevent illness and injury
  • Promote wellness and safety
  • Value conscious consumption
  • Information / flexibility support rational
    choice current transparency re price and
    quality not sufficient
  • Overcome 3rd party funding problem by increase
    consumer accountability

2. Ensure value conscious consumption of
services, treatments
3. Promote efficient creation of capacity for
labour, infrastructure, innovation
4. Safeguard the delivery of quality by providers
5. Promote cost competitiveness
7. Build and organise capabilities of
intermediaries to enable them to effectively
manage the system
6. Promote sustainable financing mechanisms to
collect and redistribute funds
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
9
Principles
  • Supply
  • Analyze capacity under / over?
  • Physical capacity and capital
  • Skills labour supply
  • Technology
  • Quality of suppliers
  • Clinical practice standards
  • Available information re organisational
    performance
  • Risk based monitoring audits, including
    supplier self reporting
  • Cost competitiveness
  • Enhance productivity (but not by excess capacity
    over servicing)
  • Purchase effectively

2. Ensure value conscious consumption of
services, treatments
3. Promote efficient creation of capacity for
labour, infrastructure, innovation
4. Safeguard the delivery of quality by providers
5. Promote cost competitiveness
7. Build and organise capabilities of
intermediaries to enable them to effectively
manage the system
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
10
Principles
2. Ensure value conscious consumption of
services, treatments
  • Improve finance mechanisms
  • Efficient financing mechanisms match supply and
    demand
  • Align reimbursement mechanisms with providers
    that best manage risk DRGs capitation
  • Pay suppliers for performance cost and quality

3. Promote efficient creation of capacity for
labour, infrastructure, innovation
4. Safeguard the delivery of quality by providers
5. Promote cost competitiveness
7. Build and organise capabilities of
intermediaries to enable them to effectively
manage the system
6. Promote sustainable financing mechanisms to
collect and redistribute funds
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
11
Principles
  • Implementation
  • Build awareness align consumer and supplier
    interests or
  • Provide financial incentives assumes non
    alignment or
  • Impose mandates - if awareness and incentives
    fail

2. Ensure value conscious consumption of
services, treatments
consumer ism
incentives
3. Promote efficient creation of capacity for
labour, infrastructure, innovation
regulation
4. Safeguard the delivery of quality by providers
5. Promote cost competitiveness
7. Build and organise capabilities of
intermediaries to enable them to effectively
manage the system
6. Promote sustainable financing mechanisms to
collect and redistribute funds
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
12
Agenda
  • Introduction to health sector reform
  • Supply side issues
  • Possible responses reform experiences

13
GDP PPP 5 000 - 10 000
SA supply / 1000 population GP
0.34 Specialists 0.15 Beds used 2.8
Low versus peers
Discovery research Monitor database
14
Medical Education
15
The supply of Medical Professionals in SA
  • Nurses
  • Production of new nurses has failed to keep up
    with the increase in population, let alone with
    the shortages created by the emigration exodus
    and the need for new nurses as a result of the
    HIV pandemic.
  • Medical Education
  • Medical schools enrolments unchanged 1996
    2003 except Limpopo
  • Demographics of 2003 enrolment
  • Black 41 White 34 Indian 18 Coloured 7
  • 54.6 female worldwide phenomenon and issue re
    Specialisation
  • Prof Carol Black President of Royal College of
    Physicians noted that female graduates tended to
    specialise in areas such as geriatrics and
    palliative care and avoid cardiology and gastro
    because of their long hours.
  • Others identified that women are deterred from
    hospital practice by its inflexible training and
    practice
  • UCT case study 2003 undergrad 63 MMed 37
  • favoured Paediatrics Anaesthetics Psychiatry
    OG Public Health.

Doctors in a Divided Society (HSRC) Breier
Wildschut
16
Structural issues
17
GDP PPP gt 20 000
Similar supply
Within income stratified countries, supply
numbers alone dont predict utilisation patterns.
V low US beds after 25 years of DRGs
Discovery research Monitor database
18
Is there a relationship between supply of beds in
a region and complexity (case mix) of cases
admitted?
Discovery Health
19
Pretoria hospital top 20 of admissions by
volume
Top 5 admission types unusually low complexity
and significantly more costly than expected
Discovery Health
20
SADFM study 2004
  • 24 acute public hospitals alpha and beta
    functional scores applied to 5,243 inpatients
  • Results
  • 34 required acute care
  • 43 sub acute care
  • 9 rehab services
  • 5 palliative care
  • 10 home care

Structural issue absence of facility alternatives
Dr H Loubsher SADFM
21
Supply side summary
  • Hospital beds
  • selective oversupply e.g. Pretoria, JHB
    supplier induced demand
  • dearth of day hospitals step down facilities
    (structural issues)
  • Professionals supply norms low in SA overall
  • Underinvestment inadequately managed
    demographic transition is leading to an
    undersupply of doctors and specialists
  • Worrying number of older specialists, not enough
    younger specialists in practice also effects
    mentoring
  • private sector now has growing waiting lists
  • Inefficiently structured referral system
  • care delivered at inappropriately costly levels
    (especially hospitals)
  • health professional practice highly
    individualistic rarely in teams e.g.
  • senior specialist supervising GPs clinical
    nurses with a doctor
  • fee for service remuneration incentive to
    perform high priced services

22
Supply side summary
  • Measures
  • Access
  • good access for those who can afford it
  • unmanaged access to beds wasteful oversupply
    over-servicing
  • specialist numbers in transition declining
    long waiting lists
  • Equity inequitable by affordability not need.
  • historically benefit packages vary greatly
    especially access to new Rx (PMBs, Circular 8
    may be address this)
  • managed care links patient to needed care
    costly to administer
  • Efficiency
  • fee for service over servicing high cost
  • high quality care, but expensive
  • Structure is wasteful, with excessive services
    delivered at inappropriate and unnecessarily
    sophisticated levels of care.

23
Agenda
  • Introduction to health sector reform
  • Supply side issues
  • Possible responses reform experiences

24
McKinsey Implementation choices
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
Unfettered Market
Contract for Value
Regulation
25
McKinsey Implementation choices
The McKinsey 2007 No.1 Universal principles for
health care reform
Unfettered Market
Contract for Value
Regulation
26
Supply side structural reforms 1. Unfettered
Market Fee for service Managed Care
  • Increase value by making the market work
  • Supplier transparency throughput prices
    compliance with evidence quality and outcomes
  • Tariff reform to fairly reward efficiency,
    especially promoting appropriate referral
    arrangements, e.g.
  • Same tariff for same service or lower tariffs
    for below scope procedure by a clinician?
  • Generous team codes encourage team leadership
    e.g. specialists manage team of GP surgeons, GPs
    manage clinical nurses and pharmacists

27
Interactions between member and Scheme
administrator Fee for Service vs. Contract for
Value
annualised expert opinion
Arms length Managed Care is costly to
administer
28
Supply side structural reforms 3. Regulation
  • Rigid regulation may result in unintended
    consequences?
  • Further distort referral chain undermine
    quality or drive inappropriate care
  • Indication creep re billing
  • Helpful regulation in areas of positive
    externalities which market wont / cant
    address
  • Mandatory cover for employed
  • Preventing monopoly behaviour
  • By creating framework, may be enabling of market
    and contracting
  • Mandate transparent minimum level reporting on
    results of contracts

29
Supply side structural reforms 2. Purchaser /
Provider contract for value
  • Aim to promote selective contracting to bring
    value to the system
  • Selectively increase beds in strategic areas
  • Day and Step down facilities
  • Licenses
  • Sell some Public hospital stock?
  • Clinician supply HPC(SA)
  • create transitory increase in specialist supply,
    promote entry for foreign specialists
  • permit hospitals to selectively employ doctors in
    strategic areas to improve efficiency ICU ER
    night cover etc
  • Pay for performance quality and cost

30
Purchaser / Provider contract for value
  • Competent authorities purchase services from
    independent providers on a capitated basis for a
    contracted period.
  • Model represents the consensus of international
    reform efforts.
  • Demand side reform
  • based on a limited number of large efficient
    purchaser funds, whose available funds are
    population risk adjusted i.e. link overall need
    to funding.
  • purchaser role is to
  • purchase services from suppliers on a capitated /
    budget basis
  • provider funding linked to predicted need of
    population segment to be served
  • constant measurement robust management of
    contracted independent providers of care to meet
    budget and quality aims
  • supplier failure contract termination
    replacement of managers / providers
  • purchasers must be
  • sufficiently large to deploy predictive data
    tools and manage contracts
  • sufficient in number to compete on value (price
    and quality) for members
  • mandatory environment but choice of fund with
    transparent tools e.g. HQA
  • Making risk profit attract brightest minds

31
Contracting includes
  • Evidence based medicine
  • identify which procedures (drugs, surgical
    interventions, processes of care) produce best
    results relative to cost
  • reward those procedures with providers.
  • Appropriate level of skill
  • Service rewarded at appropriate expertise level
    i.e. move patients down skill gradient
    Specialist to GP to nurse, as necessary.
  • Process redesign / reconfiguration
  • reward integrated service delivery (team
    approach)
  • incentivise a new model of primary (first
    contact) care with bigger practices, more
    specialists, more equipment
  • encourage the transfer of inpatient functions
    to primary care
  • separation of emergency and elective / chronic
    care (different specialisation mix requirements)

32
Purchaser provider contract for value
  • Measures
  • Access good may use selective co-payments
  • Equity
  • Provider links services to individual need
    supported by adequate funds
  • Incentives deliver appropriate type volume
    quality of services within framework
  • Efficiency purchaser / supplier separation is
    most successful in producing efficiency
  • Purchaser tools link funds to efficiency
    quality, as their major managerial concern (i.e.
    not running services)
  • Provider / supply side is internally incentivised
    to primarily respond to the customers (market
    competition) equity, efficiency and quality
    needs.
  • Managers know that their available funding is
    population risk adjusted i.e. under spending
    implies denial of care and over spending implies
    wastage.

33
Comparing Structures Measures
  • Purchaser / Provider Contract
  • Access
  • good selective co-payments
  • Equity
  • Provider links illness to services adequate
    funds available
  • appropriate type volume quality of services
  • Efficiency
  • most successful in producing efficiency
  • Commonest reform structure
  • Current Structure
  • Access
  • good access based on affordability but cost
    increases mean real decline in South Africans
    covered
  • access also being compromised by supply issues
    including inefficient referral arrangements
  • Equity
  • benefits based on affordability, and drive access
    to services not illness
  • costly managed care links patient to needed care
  • Efficiency
  • high quality care, but expensive
  • Wasteful structure

34
US experience Doctors coordinating care
  • Comparison UK NHS with California Kaiser
    Permanente
  • Similar per capita cost but Kaiser far better
    comprehensive and convenient primary care and
    access to specialists and hospitalisation. Age
    adjusted hospital admissions 1/3 lower than NHS
  • Kaiser / 1000 supply OH specialists double no
    GPs in single practice, most in large group
    practices
  • Kaiser performance underpinned by good
    integration efficient hospital use benefits of
    competition, investment in IT.
  • BMJ January 2002
  • Medicare pilot
  • By coordinating care and keeping their patients
    out of hospital, doctors can help reduce overall
    health care spending, Medicare officials said
    yesterday in announcing the results of an
    experiment that allowed doctors to share in cost
    savings.
  • New York Times 2007

35
Contracts
  • Success factors in Contracts
  • Incentives provided by payment mechanisms
  • Adequacy of the accompanying monitoring and
    information systems
  • Readiness and suitability of the service the
    market and the key actors
  • Public Purchaser-Private provider Contracting
  • for Health Services Inter-American Development
    Bank
  • Preconditions for market mechanisms in Hospitals
  • Funding related to patients treated incentive
    to be productive
  • Selective contracting i.e. feasible alternatives
    with capacity exists
  • Hospital information to measure cost and quality
  • Anti-competitive issues include
  • Mergers planning licenses system wide
    negotiation joint hospital and physician
    negotiations hospital exclusive / favoured
    supplier contracts
  • Competition in the provision of
  • hospital services OECD Oct 2006

36
Risk adjusted purchasing
  • DRG implementation by country
  • USA 1983
  • Sweden 1985
  • Finland 1987
  • Portugal 1989
  • Canada 1990
  • UK 1992
  • Australia Ireland 1993
  • Italy Belgium 1995
  • France 1997
  • Denmark Norway 1999
  • Singapore early 2000s
  • Netherlands Germany Japan 2003
  • Others countries with pilots or investigations
  • China Russia Brazil etc

Analysing Changes in Health Financing
Arrangements in High Income countries Busse et
al 2007 World bank HNP
37
Predicting outcomes
Discovery Health
38
?
39
Summary health sector reform in SA
  • Align supply with need supply is both capacity
    and how the system is structured
  • NB of separating procurement from supply
  • NB to manage and incentivise providers to balance
    quality and costs
  • Need tools to monitor and manage the balance

40
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