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Road to UHC and Beyond: Japan ’ s 50-year Experience. 10 th Anniversary Conference Towards Universal Health Coverage: Increasing Enrolment Whilst Ensuring Sustainability Tomoko Ono OECD Health Division Accra, 5 th November, 2013. Tokyo Station. Tokyo Tower. Sky Tree.
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Road to UHC and Beyond: Japan’s 50-year Experience • 10th Anniversary Conference • Towards Universal Health Coverage: • Increasing Enrolment Whilst Ensuring Sustainability • Tomoko Ono • OECD Health Division • Accra, 5th November, 2013
Tokyo Station Tokyo Tower Sky Tree 1961: Achievement of Universal Health Coverage 2011:50th Year Anniversary of Achieving UHC • 1920s: Introduction of Health Insurance Scheme
UHC helped Japan to achieve good health results with relatively low health expenditures
Outline of Presentation • Health system of Japan at a glance • Financing: Multiple insurances schemes • Payment: FFS with unified fee-schedule • Current challenges
Recap historical development 1958:National insurance law (mandate) 1956:30% not covered 1938: National Insurance law 1922: Health insurance law 1945: End of WWII
Source: WHO, World Health Report 2013 Universal Health Coverage Population coverage: • 100% achieved in 1961 Cost coverage: • 82% by government or social security in 2011 Service coverage: • Outpatient, Inpatient, Dental, Pharmaceuticals
Key Feature of Health Systems • Financing: • Multiple health insurance schemes, contribution + general tax + co-payment (with ceiling and exemption for low-income group) • Payment: • Managed FFS systemthrough unified fee-schedule for all providers/insurance schemes in Japan • Service delivery: • Predominantly private providers (although public providers exists) • Roles of hospitals/clinics and GPs/specialists functions are not well defined in practice • Access: • Free choice of provider by patients (no gate keeping)
4 Different Insurance Schemes • Over 3,000 insurance plans in Japan, grouped into • Citizens’ Health Insurance (CHI): farmers, self-employed, unemployed and elderly (later separated) • National Health Insurance Associations (NHIA): mainly small and medium enterprise employees and their dependent • Society Managed Health Insurance (SMHI): mainly employees of large firms and their dependent • Mutual Aid Association (MAA): mainly public sector employees and their dependent • Limited role for private insurance
Achieving Universal Coverage UHC in 1961 Source: Takagi 1994, World Bank 2013 (forthcoming)
UHC: Citizen’s Health Insurance’s Role • Historical Development of CHI • Build upon the existing community-based health insurance scheme: voluntary participation and expanded through government subsidies • Participation was mandated in 1961 for all residents, management moved to municipalities • Current financial sources: contribution from beneficiary, cross-subsidy from other schemes, subsidies from national and local government and copayment
Elderly Employee Government Revenues for Social Health Insurance cross-subsidies CHI NHIA SMHI MAA Individual Individual Individual Individual Individual
Single Payment System: Fee-Schedule • Fee-schedule • Sets prices for each services, pharmaceuticals and devices for virtually all providers • Defines the benefits and conditions for reimbursement • Auditing for these conditions • For most providers, these are the only sources of revenue • Fee schedule revisions (every 2 years) • Managed by national government • Institutionalized process of negotiating benefits and resource allocation among key stake holders • Continuous process of adaptation and adjustment
Biennial Fee-Schedule Revisions Government Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare Ministry of Finance Macro: Global Revision Rate Central Social Insurance Medical Council Micro: Fee negotiation for item-by-item Medical services Medical devises Pharmaceuticals
Pharmaceuticals Pricing Mechanisms • In 1982, 39% of national medical expenditure was spent on pharmaceuticals. • It went down to 27% in 1988 and 21% in 1998, then went up again to 25% in 2009 • We set a price in fee schedule, but providers purchase products for which bigger discounts can be negotiated and earned. • Government conduct survey of pharmaceutical prices of each products and set new fee schedule price at a certain percentile.
Cost Containment Mechanism • Cost containment tools • Price control via negotiation, by monitoring volume • New technology - setting the initial price low, restriction to patients with specific conditions • Other restrictions • Balanced-billing (charging more than the fees set in the fee schedule): banned • Extra-billing (billing services and pharmaceuticals not listed in the fee schedule with those listed): only allowed for amenity and a few new technologies still being evaluated
Slow economic growth and increasing social security expenditure Real GDP Growth Rate and Social Security Expenditures Real GDP Growth Rate Source: Cabinet Office of Japan
Ageing Population and Inequality between Insurance Schemes Age structure of CHI beneficiary, 1975, 2001 and 2007
UHC in Japan was achieved through... • Long-term political commitment for UHC, supported by political groups with different ideologies • Democratic movements and commitment to social solidarity in post-war Japan provided impetus to expand coverage • Incremental expansion of health insurance coverage • Harmonization of benefits and established redistribution schemes
Cost Containment despite FFS system • Institutionalized fee-schedule revision process • Global revision rate • Item-by-item fee negotiation: mitigate increase in expenditure, maintain appropriate solvency for providers, and reflect government priority • Stringent and disciplined payment system • Unified fee-schedule for all health services and conditions of its use • Ban on balanced-billing and restriction on extra-billing
Kyoto, Japan Niigata, Japan Acknowledgement:Ghana Health Insurance AuthorityProf. Naoki Ikegami, Keio University School of MedicineJapan-World Bank Partnership Program on UHC • Kagoshima, Japan
Acknowledgement for picture • Slide 2 • Tokyo Stationhttp://www.oldphotosjapan.com/ja/photos/78/tokyo-eki • Tokyo Towerhttp://showa.mainichi.jp/photo/2008/12/post-1b55-23.html • Sky Tree • Slide • Niigata, http://uonuma.biz/blog/9927 • Kyoto, http://futuretihing.net/futurething/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/63bf16f29e082d9d510aac6e4fd47ea6.jpg
Total Health Expenditure (% of GDP) Source: OECD, Health at a Glance 2011
Japan attained UHC while still a middle income country, and at the start of its rapid economic growth period Real GDP and GDP per Capita (in 1990 Geary-Khamis Dollar) Billions of $ GDP per capita (right) $ per capita Real GDP (left) Attainment of Universal Health Coverage (1961) ($420B, $4291per capita) 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 Source: Angus Maddison (2001) “The World Economy – A Millennial Perspective” 30