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Essential medicines and health reform in China. Ye Lu Ph.D Dept. of Health Economics Fudan University 2011-05-30 Geneva. What is the main problem we are trying to resolve?. Problems in China’s Health System. China’s health system is “sick” and the diagnosis is clear:
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Essential medicines and health reform in China Ye Lu Ph.D Dept. of Health Economics Fudan University 2011-05-30 Geneva
Problems in China’s Health System • China’s health system is “sick” and the diagnosis is clear: • “Kan Bing Nan, Kan Bing Gui” • Healthcare is available but not affordable and not accessible • The problems have been detected: • Insufficient Government funding for public health/essential care; • Distorted provider payment system relying on fee-for-service; • Wide-spread exposure to health-related financial risk; • Weak quality/safety management and cost control systems; • Unclear and insufficient role of government
Rapid increase in health care expenditure (1978-2009) Source: Health Statistic Yearbook
Decreased share of govt. exp. and increased share of out-of-pocket(1990-2009) Source: Health Statistic Yearbook, 2010
The Issue of Pharmaceutical Expenditure in China • Drug revenue is the main source of reimbursement for hospitals • High proportion of pharmaceutical expenditure in total health expenditure • High economic burden for the patient is caused by drugs • Irrational price setting on drugs
Pharmaceutical expenditure in China, 1997-2006 Source: China National Health Accounts Report 2010
How did we get started? New Health Care Reform Planned Announced in April 2009
Five Core Tasks(2009-2011) • The Healthcare Financing -Universal Basic medical insurance system -Equal public Health system • Health care Delivery -Sound public community facilities -Essential medicine policy system -Public hospital reform
National Essential Medicine System • Improve drug supply • Central Government sets "guiding retail prices "of essential medicines • “Based on the result of tender, provincial governments set the unified purchasing prices within the range of the government purchasing price” • “government run health care institutions at grass-roots levels shall sell drugs with zero mark up” • Essential medicines will be insured, “with the reimbursing rate much higher than that of non-essential medicines”
The timeline of promoting National essential medicines • 2009, each province (autonomous regions and municipalities) in 30% of the government-run urban community health center and county implementation of the system • 2010, 60% • 2011 initial establishment of a national essential medicines system • Full implementation the national essential medicines system
National essential medicines list • 2009 version of EML for Community based health center (Aug, 2009) • 205 kinds chemical drugs and biological products • 102 varieties Chinese medicines • coupled with policy of “0 mark-up” for sales and public subsidy for losses, aiming to control overprescribing in community and rural public facilities
Pricing • National Development and Reform Commission(NDRC) Set the retail price for the national essential medicines 296, 2349 formulation • Involving more than 3,000 pharmaceutical enterprises • 49% of drug prices are not adjusted, 45% of drug price cuts, the average decline of 12%, 6% of drugs to raise prices
Bidding and purchasing of essential drugs • the government-led centralized drug purchasing • Online procurement, price transparency • direct delivery • Drug prices are not higher than 15% of ex-factory price
Medicine Supply and Procurement • Single tender, volume-price negotiation and unified distribution is to be used for procurement, with an emphasis on reducing intermediaries in the distribution chain
Rational use of medicine • The government's primary health care and health institutions all the equipment and the use of national essential medicines • Other types of medical institutions have to choice to use a certain percentage of essential medicines • Establish an effective management system of essential medicines
Current situation • Implemented in 60% of community health center in the provinces. • The price of medicines are reduced 20-30% • Patients would like to visit secondary hospitals for available medicines • Cost of Community health centers cannot be fully reimbursement by the government after implementing the zero mark-up policy • Pharmaceutical manufactories would not like to produce the EM due to the low price
Key issues • 307 medicines in EML cannot meet the needs of urban residents. (children, chronic disease, antibiotics) • Main challenges in financing schemes (Compensation mechanism needs to be further improved) • Mechanism to incentive doctor rational prescribe of medicines • Price regulation for EM need to be improved. • How to balance the quality and price of the EM (The lower price is the better?) • How to implement the EMP in non- government running health facilities and village clinics.
Prioritize the national essential drug system 2011 • consolidate and expand the scope of the essential medicine system and implement the system in county and regional medical institutions • consider adjusting the national essential drug list; • improve essential drug procurement, distribution, management, and use; • improve drug payment policies; • encourage high-level hospitals to guide grassroots medical institutions on the use of medicines