New fees on health services at hospitals must be based on people’s
living conditions to make them reasonable and affordable, said deputy head of
the Tra Vinh Province Health Department Nguyen Van Thang.
While many other provinces and
cities have applied their new fee rates at over 90 percent of the caps
regulated by the Ministries of Health and Finance in February, Tra Vinh
authorities have yet to announce local rates, though they will be much lower,
Thang told Tuoi Tre.
The provincial Social Insurance
Agency has allowed for current fees to be raised to 80 percent of the ceiling,
but the provincial health department and other relevant agencies have decided
the rate will be just 53 percent, which they consider appropriate with people’s
living conditions.
“Tra Vinh is a poor province, so
if we suddenly raised the fee rates too high, poor people would not be able to
afford them,” Thang said.
Phan Thanh Dung, Thang’s deputy
and the director of the Tra Vinh General Hospital, said, “Increasing a fee by
two times is already too much, so if that fee were raised tenfold, then many
patients, especially the poor, would likely die from diseases for which
treatment costs have become unaffordable to them.”
Unlike many other localities,
where higher fees have been imposed on the health services that are most
common, for instance, sickbeds, Tra Vinh will apply increased fees mainly for
technical services that are less frequent.
With the expected new fees,
revenue from 25 percent of the total number of services will not be enough to
cover cost, but local authorities said they would fill the gap by using part of
the revenue from high-priced services.
The local authorities have also
outlined a roadmap for increasing health fess from now to 2015. Accordingly, at
times when the local economic strength is better, the fees on certain health
services will be increased to improve hospitals’ revenue, Thang said.
As previously reported, 33
provinces and cities have applied their new health service fees since August 1.
Of these localities, four will have fees that are over 90 percent of the
ceiling allowed by the two ministry’s schedule, which covers 447 health services.
Under the schedule, most prices
will rise 2 to 10 times current costs, but some may jump 20 times.
Fees are not quality a meter
Asked if such low new fees can
affect the quality of health services , Dung said, “Even when we do not
increase fees, we still serve patients in accordance with relevant regulations
by the Health Ministry. We do not serve patients only on the basis of how much
they pay for health fees.”
The province’s health sector
pledges to ensure the quality of medical examination and treatment, Dung said,
adding that treatment procedures, patient wards, medical equipment and
facilities, and other items will meet required standards.
“With the new fees to be applied,
hospitals will face difficulties in balancing their revenue and spending, but
we will not loosen management over quality or limit the use of advanced medical
techniques,” Dung said.
He emphasized that “hospital fees
are not a gauge for quality. Quality should be measured through the results of
treatment.”
He also said hospitals’
management should use the additional revenue earned from higher fees in proper
ways. “This extra revenue must be spent mainly on improving medical examination
and treatment conditions.”
TUOI TRE
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