| Literature DB >> 31210679 |
Kanitsorn Sumriddetchkajorn1, Kenji Shimazaki2, Taichi Ono2, Tesshu Kusaba3, Kotaro Sato3, Naoyuki Kobayashi4.
Abstract
Thailand's policy on universal health coverage (UHC) has made good progress since its inception in 2002. Every Thai citizen is now entitled to essential preventive, curative and palliative health services at all life stages. Like its counterparts elsewhere, however, the policy faces challenges. A predominantly tax-financed system in a nation with a high proportion of people living in poverty will always strive to contain rising costs. Disparities exist among the different health insurance schemes that provide coverage for Thai citizens. National health expenditure is heavily borne by the government, primarily to reduce financial barriers to access for the poor. The population is ageing and the disease profiles of the population are changing alongside the modernization of Thai people's lifestyles. Thailand is now aiming to enhance and sustain its UHC policy. We examine the merits of different policy options and aim to identify the most promising and feasible way to enhance and sustain UHC. We argue that developing the existing primary care system in Thailand has the greatest potential to provide more self-sustaining, efficient, equitable and effective UHC. Primary care needs to move from its traditional role of providing basic disease-based care, to being the first point of contact in an integrated, coordinated, community-oriented and person-focused care system, for which the national health budget should be prioritized.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31210679 PMCID: PMC6560367 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.18.223693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
The role of primary care in enhancing and sustaining universal health coverage in Thailand
| Measure | Current situation | Potential of primary care | Enhanced role for primary care |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sustainable raise of revenue | Funding UHC through levying tax contributions on the population is hampered by the difficulty of determining incomes accurately among the self-employed. | Self-sustaining and diverse care | Primary care provides improved accessibility, continuity, coordination and comprehensiveness of care. |
| Efficient use of revenue | Future UHC costs can be contained by factors such as central procurement, enforced use of the national formulary, assessment of the merits of new medical interventions, designation of family physicians as the gatekeepers of access to specialist care, and use of closed-end payments. | Affordable care | Primary care lowers the costs of health services through cost–effective preventive health care and deploying family physicians to lead medical teams. |
| Equitable use of revenue | Fragmentation across national insurance schemes with different benefit packages and payment mechanisms creates disparities in service provision across groups of the population. | Available care | A system based on primary care is more likely to achieve conformity of essential benefits across the different national health schemes in Thailand. |
| Effective use of revenue | The health benefits provided under UHC must be cost–effective, beneficial to the worst-off groups and protective against impoverishment of households. | Holistic care | Primary care prioritizes preventive and promotive care as a complement to standard curative and palliative care. |
UHC: universal health coverage.
Fig. 1The potential of primary care for achieving sustainability of Thailand’s universal health coverage policy