| Literature DB >> 31615140 |
Xerxes Seposo1,2.
Abstract
The Philippine health system has undergone various changes which addressed the needs of the time. These changes were reflected in the benchmarks and indicators of performance of the whole health system. To understand how these changes affected the health system (HS), this study determined the changes in the Philippine health system in relation to different health domains (health determinants, financing, and management/development). Two HS periods were identified, namely, health system period 1 (HS 1) from 1997-2007 and health system period 2 (HS 2) from 2008-2017. Each HS period was assessed based on three domains. The first two domains were quantitatively assessed based on an interrupted time-series method, while the third one underwent a comparative analysis using two Health Systems in Transition reports (2011 and 2018). This study was able to assess the developmental changes in the Philippine health system. Specifically, the (health determinant) maternal mortality rate (MMR) significantly decreased by three maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, the (health financing) tobacco excise tax increased by 13,855 (in Million PhP) in HS 2, and there was (health management/development) an improvement in access to health facilities. However, there was an indication of retrogressive progress with some challenges in HS 1 which remained unaddressed in HS 2. While it seems promising that the health system has progressed with improvements apparent in both health outcomes (e.g., MMR) and health financing (e.g., tobacco excise tax), such improvements were overshadowed by the inefficiencies, which were not addressed by the current health system (HS 2), thus making it more retrogressive than progressive.Entities:
Keywords: Philippines; health determinant; health financing; health management; health systems
Year: 2019 PMID: 31615140 PMCID: PMC6955948 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare7040116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Health system analysis methodological framework.
Figure 2Analysis strategies subject to the availability of the data points for each variable. ITS = interrupted time-series.
Figure 3Graphical summary of health system development.
Interrupted time series results for each variable of interest.
| Health Domain | Variables | Estimate | Standard Error | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health determinants | Life Expectancy | −0.007 | 0.005 | - |
| Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR) | −3.25 | 0.435 | *** | |
| Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) | 0.260 | 0.015 | *** | |
| HIV Incidence | 965 | 57.5 | *** | |
| TB Incidence | 13.7 | 0.086 | *** | |
| Health financing | Total Health Expenditure (THE) | −0.135 | 0.048 | ** |
| Tobacco Excise Taxes | 13855 | 2824 | *** |
p-value: *** p < 0.001; ** 0.001 < p ≤ 0.05; - statistically not significant.
Figure 4Malnutrition: Prevalence of severe wasting, weight for height (% of children under 5); overweight: prevalence of overweight, weight for height (% of children under 5); HIV expenditure: inflation-adjusted HIV expenditure (in USD millions); mean representation of the selected health determinant (malnutrition and overweight), and health financing (inflation-adjusted HIV expenditure) variables.
Figure 5Health determinants in various health systems.
Figure 6Health financing parameters (total health expenditure, HIV expenditure, tobacco excise tax) in either of the health system periods.
Summary table of the Features, Challenges, Reforms, and the pertinent Laws/Statutes passed and enforced during the respective health systems.
| Health System 1 (1997–2007) | Health System 2 (2008–2017) | |
|---|---|---|
| Features | 1. Decreasing Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR)/Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) | 1. Expansion of PhilHealth coverage; however, low financial protection |
| 2. Private health sector constituted bigger proportion in health service delivery than public health sector | 2. Data gathering was existent; however, intensified and modernized effort is needed | |
| 3. Decentralization of health care services (fragmented health service delivery) | 3. Intersectoral approaches to health and in its investment programming at the national and local levels (unified targeting for poor, etc.) | |
| 4. Emphasis on primary health care | 4. Increase in client satisfaction to government health services | |
| 5. Rapid increase in nursing schools | 5. Concerted efforts to ensure health care data privacy | |
| 6. Introduction of health technology assessment (HTA) by PhilHealth (in identifying priority problems on the use of medical technologies needing systematic assessment) | 6. Care-seeking behavior was dictated by ability to pay | |
| 7. Increasing PhilHealth coverage | 7. Waiting time improved | |
| 8. Waiting time/hospital length of stay decreased | 8. Treatment seeking attitude improved among households | |
| 9. Migration of health workers, particularly nurses | 9. Increased use of rural health units, decrease use of private clinics | |
| 10. Increase in health financing | 10. MMR decreased due to the increased facility-based deliveries and skilled birth attendants | |
| 11. Existence of palliative care (cancer patients) | ||
| 12. Success in closing the gender gap | ||
| 13. Disaster health management system in place | ||
| 14. Increase in health financing | ||
| Challenges | 1. Rising non-communicable diseases (NCDs) | 1. Problems with devolved health financing and service delivery (fragmented strategy) |
| 2. High cost of accessing health service | 2. Uneven distribution of health staff across the country (concentrated in National Capital Region) | |
| 3. Low level financial protection | 3. Uneven distribution of health facilities across the country (concentrated in NCR) | |
| 4. High out-of-pocket (OOP) payments | 4. TB Directly Observed Treatment Short Course (DOTS) accreditation is low | |
| 5. Absence of an integrated curative and preventive network | 5. Overregulation of programs (National TB Program and PhilHealth) | |
| 6. Weak health information system/governance | 6. High OOP payments | |
| 7. Absence/lack of access of private sector data | 7. Even though health services were utilized, this did not directly translate to health status improvement | |
| 8. PhilHealth still used paper-based claims management | 8. PhilHealth insurance claims stagnated at 33% | |
| 9. Lack of health service information (PhilHealth) | 9. Hospital bed availability was a difficulty | |
| 10. Weak/non-existent structures in engaging community and patient participation with regard to health decision-making | 10. Geographical constraints in service delivery (geographically isolated and disadvantaged areas) | |
| 11. Members’ perceptions are that they have insufficient information and that the transactional requirements to make claims were too large | 11. Stigma (HIV) and self-stigma (TB) were major barriers to care | |
| 12. Low sponsored program PhilHealth utilization rate | 12. Obesogenic environment; life-style related health problems | |
| 13. Uneven distribution of PhilHealth accredited providers (35% of doctors are in NCR) | 13. Air pollution and household air pollution | |
| 14. Uneven distribution of health facilities and beds across the country | 14. Low childhood immunization due to the fact of religious/cultural beliefs, as well as lack of coordination among public sector | |
| 15. Lack of geriatric facilities and services | 15. Healthcare provision tended to be either underprovided or overprovided, and costly | |
| 16. Adherence to clinical practice guidelines were loose | ||
| 17. Patient safety data was lacking | ||
| 18. Health equity issues included the apparent urban–rural divide | ||
| 19. Health technology assessment (HTA) was yet to be fully established | ||
| 20. Health data acquisition was still restricted (private sector, public sector, PhilHealth) | ||
| 21. Fragmented nature of health financing, devolved structure of service delivery, and mixed public–private health system posed immense challenges in monitoring health sector performance | ||
| 22. Issues with conflict of interest (physician-owned pharmacy) | ||
| Reforms | 1. Primary health care focus | 1. Primary health care expansion due to the intensified HFEP |
| 2. Health Facility Enhancement Program (HFEP) | 2. Deployment programs of the DOH and Local Government Units (LGUs) | |
| 3. Health sector reform agenda (HSRA) launched | ||
| 4. Corporatization of hospitals under HSRA | ||
| Health-related laws accompanying or independent of the reforms | 1. Republic Act No. 8344 “An Act Prohibiting the Demand of Deposits or Advance Payments for the Confinement or Treatment of Patients in Hospitals and Medical Clinics in Certain Cases” | 1. Sin Tax Law of 2014 |
| 2. Republic Act No. 7305 “Magna Carta for Public Health Workers” | 2. National Health Insurance Act of 2013 | |
| 3. Republic Act No. 9184 “Government Procurement Reform Act” | 3. Reproductive Health Law of 2012 | |
| 4. National Health Insurance Act of 1995 amended to Republic Act No. 9241 | 4. Tuberculosis Law of 2016 | |
| 5. 1988 Generics Act, amended to Republic Act No. 9502 “Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act” |
NCR = National Capital Region.
Highlighting the health system development from HS 1 to HS 2 using matched variables.
| Health System Development | Health System 1 (1997–2007) | Health System 2 (2008–2017) |
|---|---|---|
| Progressive | Increase in Health Financing | Increase in Health Financing |
| Increasing PhilHealth coverage | Expansion of PhilHealth coverage; however, low financial protection | |
| Waiting time/hospital length of stay decreased | Waiting time improved | |
| PhilHealth still used paper-based claims management | Data gathering was existent; however, intensified and modernized effort was needed | |
| Absence of an integrated curative and preventive network | Increased use of rural health units, decreased use of private clinics | |
| Low sponsored program PhilHealth utilization rate | Treatment seeking attitude improved among households | |
| Retrogressive | Introduction of health technology assessment (HTA) by PhilHealth | Health technology assessment (HTA) was yet to be fully established |
| Decentralization of health care services (fragmented health service delivery) | Fragmented nature of health financing, devolved structure of service delivery, and mixed public–private health system posed immense challenges in monitoring health sector performance | |
| Rising non-communicable diseases (NCDs) | Obesogenic environment; life-style-related health problems | |
| High cost of accessing health service | Healthcare provision tended to be either underprovided or overprovided, and costly | |
| Low level financial protection | PhilHealth insurance claims stagnated at 33% | |
| High out-of-pocket (OOP) payments | High OOP payments | |
| Weak health information system/governance | Adherence to clinical practice guidelines were loose | |
| Patient safety data was lacking | ||
| Absence/lack of access of private sector data | Health data acquisition was still restricted (private sector, public sector, PhilHealth) | |
| Uneven distribution of PhilHealth accredited providers (35% of doctors are in NCR) | Uneven distribution of health staff across the country (concentrated in NCR) | |
| Uneven distribution of health facilities and beds across the country | Uneven distribution of health facility across the country (concentrated in NCR) | |
| Challenges in regard to hospital bed availability |
Green = Feature; Orange = Challenge; Progressive classification: (a) Challenge changed to Feature; (b) Feature retained as Feature; Retrogressive classification: (a) Feature changed to Challenge; (b) Challenge retained as Challenge. NCR = National Capital Region.