1.Patterns of Health Expenditures and Financial Protections in Vietnam 1992-2012.
Van Minh HOANG ; Juhwan OH ; Tuan Anh TRAN ; Thi Giang Huong TRAN ; Anh Duc HA ; Ngoc Hoat LUU ; Thi Kim Phuong NGUYEN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(Suppl 2):S134-S138
Health financing has been considered as an important building block of a health system and has a key role in promoting universal health coverage in the Vietnam. This paper aims to describe the pattern of health expenditure, including total health expenditure and composition of health expenditure, over the last two decades in Vietnam. The paper mainly uses the data from Vietnam National Health Account and Vietnam Living Standards Survey. We also included data from other relevant published literature, reports and statistics about health care expenditure in Vietnam. The per capita health expenditure in Vietnam increased from US$ 14 in 1995 to US$ 86 in 2012. The total health expenditure as a share of GDP also rose from 5.2% in 1995 to 6.9% in 2012. Public health expenditure as percentage of government expenditure rose from 7.4% in 1995 to nearly 10% in 2012. The coverage of health insurance went up from 10% in 1995 to 68.5% in 2012. However, health financing in Vietnam was depending on private expenditures (57.4% in 2012). As a result, the proportion of households with catastrophic expenditure in 2012 was 4.2%. The rate of impoverishment in 2012 was 2.5%. To ensure equity and efficient goal of health system, policy actions for containing the health care out-of-pocket payments and their poverty impacts are urgently needed in Vietnam.
Developing Countries/*economics
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Financing, Government/economics/trends
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Health Expenditures/*statistics & numerical data/*trends
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*Healthcare Financing
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Insurance, Health/*economics/*trends
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Vietnam/epidemiology
2.Association Between Local Government Social Expenditures and Mortality Levels in Korea.
Hansoo KO ; Jinseob KIM ; Donggil KIM ; Saerom KIM ; Yukyung PARK ; Chang Yup KIM
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2013;46(1):1-9
OBJECTIVES: We examined the association between social expenditures of the local government and the mortality level in Korea, 2004 to 2010. METHODS: We used social expenditure data of 230 local governments during 2004 to 2010 from the Social Expenditure Database prepared by the Korean Institute for Health and Social Affairs. Fixed effect panel data regression analysis was adopted to look for associations between social expenditures and age-standardized mortality and the premature death index. RESULTS: Social expenditures of local governments per capita was not significantly associated with standardized mortality but was associated with the premature death index (decline of 1.0 [for males] and 0.5 [for females] for each expenditure of 100 000 Korean won, i.e., approximately 100 US dollar). As an index of the voluntary effort of local governments, the self-managed project ratio was associated with a decline in the standardized mortality in females (decline of 0.4 for each increase of 1%). The share of health care was not significant. CONCLUSIONS: There were associations between social expenditures of the local government and the mortality level in Korea. In particular, social expenditures per capita were significantly associated with a decline in premature death. However, the voluntary efforts of local governments were not significantly related to the decline in premature death.
Databases, Factual
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Female
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Financing, Government/*economics
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Health Expenditures/*statistics & numerical data
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Humans
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Local Government
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Male
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Mortality/*trends
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Mortality, Premature/*trends
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Regression Analysis
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Republic of Korea