Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Friday, April 9, 2010

Videos On Health Talk 20th March 2010 Penang

The death of Encik Ahmad Nazri bin Ibrahim, age 48.

"Tak ada wang mati, ada wang di EPF pun mati."





Private Wing in Public Hospitals by Dr. T Jayabalan.




A Socialist Perspective on Malaysian Health Care System
by Dr. Jeyakumar, MP Sg. Siput

Monday, March 22, 2010

A Report on The Health Care Forum Held on March 20, 2010 in Penang.


Against The Privatisation of The Public Health Care System

This article was written by Masterwordsmith and originally appeared HERE with the title The Changing Landscape of Health Care. The version published here has been edited by the Sembang-sembang Forum.

Puan Rozita bt Ahmad's Statement on the death of her husband
Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim

" Puan Rozita bt Ahmad gave a first-hand witness account of how she lost her husband Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim as a result of the privatisation of the Prosthesis Procurement Services of the public hospitals and the bureaucratic procedures involved.
 

Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim, age 48, suffered from shortness of breath one day and was rushed to a public hospital whereby he was informed that he needed to have three stents inserted in his heart vessels to relieve the blockages. The cost amounted to RM 19,000. The sum was to be paid for in cash or by a bank draft.

The family did not have the ready cash but had funds in the EPF. The EPF however refused to issue a letter of guarantee citing the reason that this was not the usual procedure. The family then appealed to the DAP to solicit for donations from the public.

However the fund came too late as during the waiting period her husband suffered a massive heart attack, lapsed into a coma and succumbed to heart failure.
 

This is a tragic example of how the pay-first policy as a result of privatisation of the prosthesis procurement department had caused a delay in the treatment of the patient resulting in his untimely death."

 


Panelists: MP Dr. Jeyakumar, Dr. Toh Kin Woon and Dr. Jayabalan

A forum on What Is Wrong With Our Health Care System? at Kompleks Penyayang on March 20, 2010. The speakers were Dr. Jeyakumar Devaraj (MP Sg. Siput, Parti Sosialist Malaysia), Dr. T. Jayabalan (Worker’s Health & Safety, Penang) and a guest speaker Puan Rozita bt Ahmad. The forum was moderated by Dr. Toh Kin Woon.

Dr. Toh began by reiterating health care as an important social service provided by the government to citizens which must be easily accessible, adequate in supply and affordable to the masses. He hopes to see health care being provided on the basis of need and not on the ability to pay. He highlighted two recent trends which go against such principles:
  • In March this year the Ministry of Health (MOH) introduced the Full Paying Patient (FPP) scheme in four public hospitals in Malaysia including Hospital Sultan Bahiyah in Alor Setar, Hospital Serdang and Hospital Sg. Buloh in Selangor as well as Hospital Sultan Ismail in Johor. This scheme, which will be expanded to more hospitals soon, allows doctors in government service to charge full fees to those patients who can afford it. This may result in discrimination against those patients who cannot afford to pay.
  • Dr. Toh also highlighted the implication of the current emphasis on medical tourism as it will raise prices in private health care service as well as extract the already scarce medical experts from the public hospitals.
He pointed out that Parti Sosialis Malaysia has been the only group that has consistently campaigned against the privatisation of public health care service. With that, he introduced Dr. T. Jayabalan.


Dr. Jayabalan raised his concerns of privatisation and health tourism.

Dr. Jayabalan began his talk by presenting his slides entitled  Affordable Health Care. He emphasized that even though health care is a basic and fundamental right of all citizens, our country does not have a National Health Policy to date.

He gave an account of the development of the public health care services. Initially, the health care system was a well-managed system that the British colonial administration handed down to the then Malayan government. Its main aim was to look after the health needs of the British expatriates and local government officials. By the time we achieved independence, some basic services and private health care were in place in major cities. However rural health care was noticeably absent. During the earlier years after Independence, a rural health service was put in place.

By the 1980's, the country's health care services saw a fundamental shift in financing. Tun Dr Mahathir was the main architect of such a change. The emphasis was that private funding is needed to pay for health care services. Soon after, we witnessed privatization of different sectors of public hospital services such as the pharmaceutical procurement, the procurement of prosthesis and hospital equipments, the laundry services, the biological waste management etc. By 1991, the privatization master plan was introduced and fully implemented. Private medical clinics were introduced in many teaching hospitals.
 

Of late, there was a suggestion to sell Institute Jantung Negara (IJN) to tthe private listed firm Sime Darby. This was met with much objection from the public. Some public teaching hospitals such as in Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) and Universiti Hospital of Universiti Malaya have private wings where full-fee paying patients do not have to wait as long a time as the non-paying patients.
 

Dr. Jayabalan further brought to attention that the government's recent drive to promote medical tourism is indirectly delaying local citizens access to medical services because private hospitals would be wooing more foreigners to seek medical treatment here. When private hospitals expand their services or when new private hospitals are built, they would be staff-pinching experienced doctors, nurses and para-medical staff from government hospitals.

This will further aggravate the already severe shortage of personnel in government hospitals. It will also disrupt the mentoring and teaching of young doctors, newly qualified nurses and paramedical staff. The end result can only be a deteriorating standard of care in government hospitals.

Dr Jayabalan further highlighted the following points:


The Restructuring of Health Care can be seen in a few areas, namely:

1. Privatization of government hospitals as mentioned above. Such decisions were made by Economic Planning Unit reporting to the Prime Minister's Office rather than the Ministry of Health with the result that the economic priorities over rule the consideration to provide health services to all.

2. Health Tourism
-- The promotion of health tourism will further extract scarce and invaluable medical personnel from the government hospitals.

3. Proliferation of Health Maintenance Organisations (HMOs) and private insurance schemes. Such commercial organisations will further promote private health care services on a for-profit basis.

He also pointed out :


The Implications of Private Wings in Public Hospitals will lead to:

1. Manpower shortage - the already existing manpower shortage will be further exacerbated.

2. Inadequate infrastructure- existing wards in the government hospitals will have to be converted to become private wings to accommodate the full-paying paying patients. This will lead to further shortages of beds for the non-paying patients.

3. The costs of upgrading hospitals to have private wings will be borne by public funds while only a few who can afford to pay for it will enjoy the benefit.


4. Discrimination by the hospital staff against the non-paying patients will arise.
 

With the on-going trend on the privatisation of health care services, equity, accountability and accessibility to health care services will be jeopardised. Dr. Jayabalan highlighted a few problems we are already facing:

1. Burgeoning private insurance costs;
2. Rising health care costs;
3. Access to services restricted in some cases where patients cannot afford to pay;
4. Expensive medication;
5. Shortage of staff and work overload at government hospitals.

Certainly, there are many problems besetting the health care system in our country. He concluded by citing a few main points:

1. The provision of health care and costing via market mechanisms are contradictory to the provision of health coverage for all and equal access;

2. Private insurance is incompatible with public social insurance as private insurance is geared to attain profit and will cover only those who can afford to pay while leaving out those who are poor or are considered to be at high risk.The old and the sick, who need the health services most, are thus left out of private insurance scheme.
 
3. There must be provision of essential health care services regardless of social classes and geographical areas;

Dr. Jayabalan concluded by emphasizing that the Ministry of Health should not implement privatisation of public health care services by stealth and underhand measures. Furthermore, such decision-making process must be transparent to include all stakeholders such as the medical and allied professions, the trade unions and the public at large.
 

Dr. Toh commented that Dr. Jayabalan had given a comprehensive presentation of health care with particular attention paid to the negative implications of recent trends. He introduced the next speaker, MP Dr. Jeyakumar.
 
Dr. Jeyakumar quoting Aneurin Bevin: "No country can call itself civilized if an ill person is denied of medical aid because of lack of means."


Dr. Jeyakumar (MP Sg Siput, Central Committe Member of Parti Sosialis Malaysia)

Dr. Jeyakumar began his presentation by stating that only one third of the country's medical doctors are serving in the government hospitals. They have to serve three quarters of the population. As such, they are overwhelmed by the ever increasing work load. Patients seeking treatment at the public hospitals have to endure long queues and a deteriorating standard of service. Any further moves to privatise the public hospitals will further add to the woes already faced by these patients.

He also pointed out that Parti Sosialis Malaysia is the only political party that has been actively campaigning against the privatisation of public health care. He explained that the main motivating factor to promote privatisation is to seek more profit. He  highlighted some controversial statements made by government leaders which confirmed such an intention.


He informed the audience that in April 2008, the Ministry of Health has given licenses to build 45 new private hospitals. He questioned where would so many new hospitals look to in order to recruit new medical and nursing staff. These new hospitals are not teaching hospitals where they are committed to educate medical and nursing students and produce more doctors and nurses for the country. Their sole aim is to provide services for profit. As such they will most likely recruit their staff from the government hospitals. It is estimated that for each private hospital established, it will poach about 10 senior medical experts from a government hospital in the same vicinity. This will severely affect the standard of service provision at the government hospitals especially at a time when there is already a severe shortage of doctors to serve in the public sector. It will be a waste of public fund for the government to train the doctors only to have them pinched by the private sector.

The departure of senior medical consultants from public hospitals will also result in shifting the already heavy work load to the medical staff who choose to remain behind. Many less experienced doctors will be called upon to perform surgeries and duties which are beyond their capabilities.

Similar situations will result in the further shortage of the nurses, para-medical staff, laboratory technicians and engineering staff in the public hospitals.


Dr. Jeyakumar reiterated that government hospitals are important institutions for training medical students, young doctors and para-medical staff. They are the centres for passing on skills and experience to the next generations of health care providers.


All these factors will cause a deterioration of services provided at the public hospitals.


Dr. Jeyakumar then discussed issues related to the privatisation of Pharmaceutical and Prosthetics Supply to the public hospitals. Recently their contract has been renewed for another ten years. Many sectors of the public hospitals have also been privatised. These include the laundry services, the biological waste disposal services, the engineering services etc.


Such privatised sectors are examples of crony capitalist system with contracts awarded to government-linked corporations run by political supporters. The lack of competition and accountability has resulted in inefficiency, inflated prices and leakages.


He stressed that the government, as the custodian of public health care system, must develop, maintain and strengthen the public health care system insteads of undermining it. He was particularly concerned as recent policies implemented by the Director General of Health, the Minister of Health and even the Prime Minister continue to undermine the public health care system.


Dr. Jeyakumar reminded the audience of Aneurin Bevin's statement made in 1952. Anuerin Bevin was a member of the Labour Party of the United Kingdom who was the main architect to establish the National Health Service in Britain. He said, "No country can call itself civilized if an ill person is denied of medical aid because of lack of means."

Dr. Jeyakumar stressed that the free market system cannot guarantee an equitable access to health care service and it is the duty of the government to ensure that the people get access to the health care services they deserve and need.

He brought to light certain changes which indicate a shift from the social democratic system to a neo-liberal economic system. For instance, whereas in the past health care services were provided by the government, we now have a free market system taking over the provision of health care services. The government has gradually abandoned its social responsibility towards the rakyat and let the little regulated market forces take over the provision of health care. The result is that health care has now become a commodity to be sold and purchased. Those who can ill afford to pay for it, and they now comprise the majority of the population, will be left to fend for themselves.


He stated that Parti Socialis Malaysia views the privatisation of public health care system as an example of the continuing dismantling of the social safety net. This is the direct consequence of the Barisan Nasional pursuing the neo-liberal economic policies.

Malaysia is not facing this assault alone. In fact, the capitalist ruling clases in many nations have imposed neo-liberal policies to maximise the profits of private corporations while at the same time dismantling the social services previously won by the masses. This attack has gained momentum after the end of the Cold War when the ruling capitalist class no longer fear the threat of revolts by the working classes.

Dr. Ton Kin Woon expressed that Dr. Jeyakumar had offered a refreshing look at the problems besetting our health care system. The cause lie in the deliberate shift from social democracy to  neo-liberalism. He cited the Goods and Services Tax (GST), a regressive tax, as another example of neo-liberal policy introduced to further beggar the rakyat.




Puan Rozita bt Ahmad's Statement on the death of her husband

Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim
 

Pn.  Rozita Ahmad giving an emotional account of how she lost her husband,Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim, because of a failure of the healthcare system.

Dr. Toh then invited Puan Rozita bt Ahmad who gave a first-hand witness account of how she lost her husband, Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim, as a result of the privatisation of the Prosthesis Procurement Services of the public hospitals and the bureaucratic procedures involved. 


Her husband Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim, age 48, suffered from shortness of breath one day and was rushed to a public hospital whereby he was informed that he needed to have three stents inserted in his heart vessels to relieve the blockages. The cost amounted to RM 19,000 and is to be paid for in cash or by a bank draft. 

The family did not have the ready cash but had funds in the EPF. The EPF however refused to issue a letter of guarantee citing the reason that this was not the usual procedure. The family then appealed to the DAP to solicit for donations from the public. 

However the fund came too late as during the waiting period her husband suffered a massive heart attack, lapsed into a coma and succumbed to heart failure. 

This is a tragic example of how the pay-first policy as a result of privatisation of the prosthesis procurement department of the public hospital had caused a delay in the treatment of the patient resulting in his untimely death.


Mr. Lim Kean Chye raising a point from the floor.


Following this, there was a lively discussion in the forum with questions raised by various members of the audience including Mr. Darshan Singh, Mr. Lim Kean Chye (founder member of the Malayan Democratic Union), Datuk Seri Dr. T. Devaraj, Mr. Lee and others. The meeting ended with a round of applause to the speakers and the chair.

I left the forum with a heavy heart and wondered why PSM is the only party that is concerned over the health care system. Many other points were raised and it is just impractical to list them all. Suffice to say that there are many issues in this area which must be tackled so as to improve the quality of health care for our citizens. This will bring untold benefits both in the short and the long term. I earnestly hope that there will be other leaders such as MP Dr. Jeyakumar and Dr. Jayabalan who truly have the welfare of citizens at heart.

*********************************

Pictures courtesy of Khris Khaira


Have you heard of Aneurin Bevan?

Have you heard of Aneurin Bevan?
This article appeared on Anil Netto's website.


If you haven’t, it is time you got acquainted with the man: Aneurin Bevan was the Minister of Health in post-war Britain who played a key role in setting up the National Health Service.
Aneurin Bevan
Aneurin Bevan - Photo courtesy of Wikipedia

It was Bevan who uttered these immortal words: “The collective principle asserts that… no society can legitimately call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical aid because of lack of means.”

Which means health care is not a commodity but a basic right that should be made available and accessible to all. It also means we need a top-class public health care system with adequate funding. That was what the speakers at a Sembang-Sembang talk this afternoon, Dr Jeyakumar and Dr Jayabalan, stressed.

Many among the audience at the Caring Society Complex in Penang were moved when they heard a woman, Roszita, describing how she lost her husband, Ahmad Nazri, 49, a heart patient, because the couple were unable to raise RM19,000 in time to buy three stents that were needed to deal with blockages.

Since the privatisation of the hospital’s pharmaceutical services, patients have had to buy such things on their own before surgery can be performed.

In Ahmad’s case, he did have the money – but it was tied up with the EPF, which was then apparently involved in a ridiculous ding-dong with the Penang GH over a guarantee of payment letter. By the time, the EPF finally issued the guarantee letter it was too late for Ahmad, who passed away on 19 January 2010. He leaves behind Roszita and five children.

As Ahmad noted just a month earlier: “Tak ada wang pun mati, ada wang di EPF pun mati. Ini adalah wang sendiri bukan nak minta wang EPF!” (Full story here.)

We can see the Health Ministry and other “health care industry” players rushing to turn health care into a commodity and trying to capitalise on so-called “medical tourism”. Hello, health care is a basic human right! What happened to rakyat didahulukan? How many more Ahmad Nazris are out there? I remember my plumber too succumbed to heart failure in very much similar circumstances a couple of years ago.
Steeped in its neo-liberal mindset, the Health Ministry now plans to extend a ‘Full Paying Patients’ pilot scheme to even more hospitals on the quiet. Basically, under this scheme, patients in general hospitals can now jump the queue to see specialists if they have the money. Apparently, the specialists are happy with the scheme (because they make more money, perhaps up to RM20,000 more a month) while patients – the ones with the money, that is – are pleased they can see the specialists more quickly.

But what about those patients without the money? No money, no talk.

What a ‘caring’ society. People First, Performance Now? More like Money First, Surgery Later.


Sunday, March 21, 2010

The Death of Encik Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim

This news report was published by The Sun on Monday January 25, 2010.

Hospital questioned over patient's death
Bernard Cheah


GEORGE TOWN (Jan 24, 2010): The Penang Hospital has been questioned over its procedures in treating serious cases after a chronic heart patient, who could not afford an urgent operation, died last week when the required guarantee of funds was late in coming.

Penang health, welfare and caring society committee chairman, Phee Boon Poh, took the hospital staff to task for not fully administering care to patient, Ahmad Nazri Ibrahim, 48, because he did not have money for the surgery immediately.

Phee said he has asked the state health department to explain the lack of proper treatment, as claimed by Ahmad Nazri’s family, which caused him to succumb to his ailment on Tuesday.

Ahmad Nazri had three cardiac blockages and had difficulty raising RM19,000 for the surgery at the hospital.

His relatives said last week, that the hospital had asked for a letter of guarantee from EPF, stating that money would be released for payment from the accounts of Ahmad Nazri and his wife Roszita Ahmad, 47.

The EPF instead issued a letter of confirmation to the Penang Hospital,  showing the available funds in Ahmad Nazri’s and Roszita’s accounts. The EPF said such a letter is accepted by public and private hospitals for serious cases.

The document was, however, deemed "not good enough" by the hospital.

When a guarantee letter required by the hospital was then issued by EPF on humanitarian grounds three weeks later on Jan 15, Ahmad Nazri’s condition worsened as his lungs were filled with water.

He died four days later.

Phee said he had asked the hospital if it had a standard operating procedure for such cases.

Questions are also being asked why the hospital rejected the EPF’s letter of confirmation.

Phee is scheduled to hold a meeting with EPF and the hospital today over the matter.

EPF public relations general manager, Nik Affendi Jaafar, told theSun last week that it was standard practice for the confirmation letter to be accepted by hospitals without any problems.

Although the EPF has never issued a guarantee letter to cover for medical expenses, it issued a special one for Ahmad Nazri on humanitarian grounds as the hospital wanted it in order to conduct surgery. -- theSun

Updated: 07:22PM Sun, 24 Jan 2010
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Saturday, March 20, 2010

One Malaysia Clinics -- by Dr. T Jayabalan


ONE MALAYSIA CLINICS

by Dr. T Jayabalan


The setting up of One Malaysia Clinics is presumably to help meet the health needs of the urban rakyat. Tan Sri Dr. Mohd Ismail Merican, the DG of health claims that the sole objective of this move is to ensure the delivery of equitable, quality healthcare to the public.


This is of course a laudable move and is very likely to be popular as well. But the issue at large is the quality of these clinics. According to Tan Sri Dr. Mohd Ismail Merican, there is a growing trend in most developing countries like Australia and the UK to delegate the routine follow-ups and monitoring of stable patients with chronic illnesses such as diabetes, hypertension and even stable heart failure to staff nurses. This may be possible in these developed countries as the nurses here are senior staff and degree holders in their profession but the same does not hold true for medical assistants in Malaysia who undergo a 3+1 nursing training programme. A study undertaken in 2009 in the Kampar district revealed that medical assistants at the government health clinics and government hospitals were found to be responsible for medication errors. A total of 1612 prescriptions were generated by medical assistants in a single week and of this, 421 were evaluated for medication errors. A total of 1169 errors were noted and some of these were critical errors. It was also noted that 39% of the 421 prescriptions by medical assistants involved the use of at least one medication categorized as Group B medicine (medicines that only medical officers are authorised to prescribe). It must be noted that medical assistants are trained to assist medical officers and not to provide treatment in the same manner as medical officers do. Furthermore, a study conducted in the US indicated that medication knowledge deficiency of the prescriber had accounted for 64% of the errors made.


Another issue that needs to be considered is the administrative cost involved in establishing these clinics. The administrative cost involved in running public health institutions have not been studied comprehensively and it is well-known that some district hospitals are underutilized mainly because patient attendance is poor. So setting up primary care organizations between ‘Kilinik Desa’, District Hospitals and other primary healthcare centres will incur further costs and may fail for want of attendance.


Apart from these issues, another consideration is that, access to healthcare cannot be provided in an ad-hoc manner. The views of all parties involved should be sought before any decisions are made and finalized. While it was claimed that senior officers from the relevant divisions of the Ministry were involved in drawing up comprehensive guidelines for the establishment and running of these clinics, but the fact remains that the view of other stakeholders, for example the MMA, and the NGOs were not solicited.


Despite these shortcomings, there are remedial measures that can be put in place to make these One Malaysia Clinics workable. There is no error-free system involving human intervention but it is possible to design a system to avoid or minimize the errors such as a primary healthcare team, made up of pharmacists, midwives, physiotherapists, senior nursing sisters, etc to run these clinics. For example, a patient coming in with minor sports injury can be treated by a physiotherapist; a pregnant lady can be assessed by a midwife; minor surgery by the medical assistant; and the pharmacists would be able to pick up prescription errors and correct them before any harm occurs. This will ensure that there will be a check and balance of prescriptions and different treatment options.


The government should consider the views of other stakeholders before embarking on this project because backpedaling after establishing these clinics would be a colossal waste of public funds.
 
End
 
[ Dr. T Jayabalan's study has been quoted by many writers and debated in the media, see Letters in Malaysiakini and other media. We published here the original letter first appeared in the Star. Editor.]

Friday, March 12, 2010

What's Wrong with Our Health Care System?

 


 

The most frequent complaint of public hospitals is the long waiting list. Do you know that the Ministry of Health (MOH) has introduced the Full Paying Patient (FPP) scheme in 4 public hospitals in Malaysia. They are the Hospital Sultan Bahiyah in Alor Setar, Hospital Serdang and Hospital Sg. Buloh in Selangor and Hospital Sultan Ismail in Johor. This will be expanded to more hospitals soon. The FPP scheme allows doctors in government service to charge full fees to those patients who can afford it. Where do the lower income group, the Government servants and retirees go to get subsidized specialist treatment? Will they be pushed behind the line of the FPP queue? What will this do to the already long waiting list to see a government specialist?

Are you paying up to RM3000 in medical insurance every year and still have the nagging fear that this may not be enough cover when you need it most? The MOH has approved 43 new health tourism licenses to private hospitals. Medical centres are buying and trying to outdo each other in buying expensive high tech equipment. Private hospitals are adding more and more frills to their services. There is a lack of control by the authorities in the hospital charges. Will private health care be out of the reach of most locals and only affordable to the rich medical tourists?
What do you know about the 1Malaysia Clinic and its impact to you? The MOH has announced that 50 1Malaysia Clinics will be set up in some urban areas. These will be manned by hospitals assistants and nurses. What is the scope and depth of diagnosis at these clinics? Will you visit these clinics if you are running a fever or some other ailment? Are these 1Malaysia Clinics another one of those 1Malaysia Whatever that keeps coming up every other month?

Not everyone is using public health care. But at the rate private health care costs are escalating, the day of affordable private health care may be out of reach of many people very soon. Come to this forum and find out what’s ailing our health care system.


HEALTH FOR ALL ( WHO declaration)


In 1977, the World Health Assembly decided that the major social goal of governments and WHO should be the attainment by all people of the world by the year 2000 of a level of health that would permit them to lead a socially and economically productive life.


In 1981, the Assembly unanimously adopted the Global Strategy for Health for All by the Year 2000. This was the birth of the “Health for All” movement.

“Health for All” does not mean an end to disease and disability, or that doctors and nurses will care for everyone. It means that resources for health are evenly distributed and that essential healthcare is accessible to everyone.

It also means that health begins at home, in schools, as well as the workplace, and that people use better approaches for preventing means that people recognise that ill health is not inevitable and that they can shape their own lives and those of their families from the avoidable burden of disease. 




By Masterwordsmith


In the past, Malaysia had a health care system that we were proud of but today, it is altogether a different story because our health care system has transformed into a buoyant dual-tiered parallel system, with a sizable and thriving private sector. To date, there is no system whereby every citizen has universal access to a unified system of health care. Ideally, the public sector caters to the bulk of the population (about 65%), but the sad truth is that only 45% of all registered doctors, and 25-30% of specialists serve in the public sector.


From the economic viewpoint, health care is a merit good that an individual or society should have on the basis of some concept of need, rather than ability and willingness to pay. However, current trends show that one day, there could be an eventual corporatization of the public sector facilities and services should be allowed to unfold, there could come a time when market forces dictate the price, extent and quality of the services offered.


 Photo : Recent protests against "Full-Fee Paying  Patients" scheme at Government hospitals. (photos from Parti Sosialis Malaysia website)
  
  
The tax-funded public health care sector caters for the bulk of the population (~65%), but is served by just about 45% of all registered doctors, and even fewer specialists (25-30%). The cost of these services is almost entirely borne by budget allocations from the central treasury, with patients paying paltry nominal sums for access both to outpatient clinics or admissions to hospitals.

 
Currently, budget allocations subsidize the public sector so patients paying only nominal fees for outpatient treatment and hospitalisation. The private sector on the other hand, has grown tremendously over the past 25 years. However, this two-tiered system with quite different goals may be unsustainable in the longer term. It is unlikely that there can be full integration of private-public health care sectors. We can hope for better partnership and collaboration of services to harness the best of each system for the health care betterment of our citizens. We should aim for a more cost-effective system. A single or easily portable system of reimbursement should also be considered. No matter what, our government must take care of the welfare of its citizens.


There are many health-care issues in our country including:
  • Long waiting list at public hospitals
  • Lack of control of charges in private hospitals
  • Lack of control of high tech medical equipment.
  • Lack of action on preventive health care
  • Level of competence of the doctors, nurses and paramedicals
If you want to know more about health care issues,  Sembang-sembang Forum is organizing a talk. Please come for the talk. You can be assured that it will be an enriching time for you.

Recommended for further reading:


Provision of Health Care to the Population: The Changing Landscape by Dr. Jeyakumar Devaraj (MP Sg. Siput)

Private wings will cripple public healthcare
by Consumers Association Penang.



The Malaysian Health Care System: A Review
by Dr. David K. L. Quek


Health For All  by World Health Organisation


Declaration on Occupational Health For All 
World Health Organization 1994


Monday, October 5, 2009

Invitation to Sembang Forum: Oct 4 2009



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