1.Development of health service in Hunan Province.
Min HU ; Gong GUO ; Xiaohua ZHAO ; Zhenqiu SUN ; Hai GUO ; Min GAO ; Dan XU ; Yazhou XIAO ; Fang ZENG ; Youzhe ZENG
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2011;36(7):692-696
OBJECTIVE:
To study the health service development in Hunan Province, and to find out the advantages and disadvantages, and to make tentative specific suggestions.
METHODS:
Comparison was made in Yunnan, Hunan, and Zhejiang Provinces in 4 major areas: health institutions, personnels, facilities, and funding.
RESULTS:
The overall health service of Hunan Province was good: The health resources increased, the allocations were reasonable, and the health expenditure decreased. Some problems appeared, such as backward primary health, shortage of medical talents, inefficient use of hospital beds, deducted government investment, increased business income, and large urban-rural gap.
CONCLUSION
There is urgent need to further develop health institutions and increase personnels, particularly improving the primary health care and making use of traditional Chinese medicine; improving the management of hospital beds to increase efficiency, increasing financial support to reduce the patients' burden, and ensuring the need of rural health care.
China
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Delivery of Health Care
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trends
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Health Services
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economics
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statistics & numerical data
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Health Services Administration
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Humans
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Rural Health
;
economics
2.Trends in Scale and Structure of Korea's Health Expenditure over Last Three Decades (1980-2009): Financing, Functions and Providers.
Hyoung Sun JEONG ; Jeong Woo SHIN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2012;27(Suppl):S13-S20
This paper introduces statistics related to the size and composition of Korea's total health expenditure. The figures produced were tailored to the OECD's system of health accounts. Korea's total health expenditure in 2009 was estimated at 73.7 trillion won (US$ 57.7 billion). The annual per capita health expenditure was equivalent to US$ PPP 1,879. Korea's total health expenditure as a share of gross domestic product was 6.9% in 2009, far below the OECD average of 9.5%. Korea's public financing share of total health expenditure increased rapidly from less than 50% before 2000 to 58.2% in 2009. However, despite this growth, Korea's share remained the fourth lowest among OECD countries that had an average public share of 71.5%. Inpatient, outpatient, and pharmaceutical care accounted for 32.1%, 33.0%, and 23.7% of current health expenditure in 2009, respectively. A total of 41.1% of current health expenditure went to hospitals, 28.1% to providers of ambulatory healthcare (15.9% on doctor's clinics), and 17.9% to pharmacies. More investment in the translation of national health account data into policy-relevant information is suggested for future progress.
Delivery of Health Care/economics/*trends
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Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data/*trends
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Humans
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Republic of Korea
3.Evidence of a Broken Healthcare Delivery System in Korea: Unnecessary Hospital Outpatient Utilization among Patients with a Single Chronic Disease Without Complications.
Jin Yong LEE ; Min Woo JO ; Weon Seob YOO ; Hyun Joo KIM ; Sang Jun EUN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2014;29(12):1590-1596
This study aims to estimate the volume of unnecessarily utilized hospital outpatient services in Korea and quantify the total cost resulting from the inappropriate utilization. The analysis included a sample of 27,320,505 outpatient claims from the 2009 National Inpatient Sample database. Using the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), patients were considered to have received 'unnecessary hospital outpatient utilization' if they had a CCI score of 0 and were concurrently admitted to hospital for treatment of a single chronic disease - hypertension (HTN), diabetes mellitus (DM), or hyperlipidemia (HL) - without complication. Overall, 85% of patients received unnecessary hospital services. Also hospitals were taking away 18.7% of HTN patients, 18.6% of DM and 31.6% of HL from clinics. Healthcare expenditures from unnecessary hospital outpatient utilization were estimated at: HTN (94,058 thousands USD, 38.6% of total expenditure); DM (17,795 thousands USD, 40.6%) and HL (62,876 thousands USD, 49.1%). If 100% of patients who received unnecessary hospital outpatient services were redirected to clinics, the estimated savings would be 104,226 thousands USD. This research proves that approximately 85% of hospital outpatient utilizations are unnecessary and that a significant amount of money is wasted on unnecessary healthcare services; thus burdening the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) and patients.
Chronic Disease/*economics/*epidemiology/therapy
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Comorbidity
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Delivery of Health Care/economics/utilization
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Health Care Costs/*statistics & numerical data
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Humans
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Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/*economics/*utilization
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Patient Admission/economics/statistics & numerical data
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Prevalence
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Unnecessary Procedures/*economics/*utilization
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Utilization Review
4.Has Income-related Inequity in Health Care Utilization and Expenditures Been Improved? Evidence From the Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of 2005 and 2010.
Eunkyoung KIM ; Soonman KWON ; Ke XU
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2013;46(5):237-248
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study is to examine and explain the extent of income-related inequity in health care utilization and expenditures to compare the extent in 2005 and 2010 in Korea. METHODS: We employed the concentration indices and the horizontal inequity index proposed by Wagstaff and van Doorslaer based on one- and two-part models. This study was conducted using data from the 2005 and 2010 Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. We examined health care utilization and expenditures for different types of health care providers, including health centers, physician clinics, hospitals, general hospitals, dental care, and licensed traditional medical practitioners. RESULTS: The results show the equitable distribution of overall health care utilization with pro-poor tendencies and modest pro-rich inequity in the amount of medical expenditures in 2010. For the decomposition analysis, non-need variables such as income, education, private insurance, and occupational status have contributed considerably to pro-rich inequality in health care over the period between 2005 and 2010. CONCLUSIONS: We found that health care utilization in Korea in 2010 was fairly equitable, but the poor still have some barriers to accessing primary care and continuing to receive medical care.
Adult
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Aged
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Delivery of Health Care/economics/*statistics & numerical data
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Health Expenditures/*statistics & numerical data
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Humans
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Middle Aged
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Nutrition Surveys
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Republic of Korea
;
Young Adult
5.Catastrophic Health Expenditures for Households with Disabled Members: Evidence from the Korean Health Panel.
Jeong Eun LEE ; Hyung Ik SHIN ; Young Kyung DO ; Eun Joo YANG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(3):336-344
Persons with disabilities use more health care services due to ill health and face higher health care expenses and burden. This study explored the incidence of catastrophic health expenditures of households with persons with disabilities compared to that of those without such persons. We used the Korean Health Panel (KHP) dataset for the years 2010 and 2011. The final sample was 5,610 households; 800 (14.3%) of these were households with a person with a disability and 4,810 (85.7%) were households without such a person. Households with a person with a disability faced higher catastrophic health expenditures, spending about 1.2 to 1.4 times more of their annual living expenditures for out-of-pocket medical expenses, compared to households without persons with disabilities. Households having low economic status and members with chronic disease were more likely to face catastrophic health expenditures, while those receiving public assistance were less likely. Exemption or reduction of out-of-pocket payments in the National Health Insurance and additional financial support are needed so that the people with disabilities can use medical services without suffering financial crisis.
Aged
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Databases, Factual
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Delivery of Health Care/*economics
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Disabled Persons
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Health Expenditures/*statistics & numerical data
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Humans
;
Middle Aged
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National Health Programs
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Odds Ratio
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Republic of Korea