Sri Lanka Health System Review

Page 99

The government emphasis on health and well-being can also influence the promotion strategies of the insurance industry.

3.5.5 Public regulation of VHI The insurance industry is bound by the Regulations of Insurance Industry Act No. 43 of 2000. The Insurance Act has vested the Insurance Board of Sri Lanka (IBSL) with the authority to regulate the for-profit and not-for-profit insurance firms (Withanachchi, 2009). Regulation of private health care comes under the purview of the MoH but the regulation of VHI schemes, which has the potential to improve access to the private health sector by higher-income groups, has not been addressed. Considering the increase in purchasing power of the higher-income group and even the middle-income group, the regulation of the industry and pricing policies can contribute to reducing OOPE and improving health financing. The Insurance Industry Act requires insurers to collect and provide basic statistics on the operation of their schemes and make this information publicly available.

3.6 Other financing 3.6.1 Parallel health systems The defence ministry and police departments have established their own health services, including tertiary-care hospitals. However, their employees can access government services as well. The Defence Ministry Scheme (Armed Forces and Police Hospitals) accounted for 0.4% of CHE in 2016 (SLR 284 million at current prices). Estate health services originated as a parallel health system, which is now being absorbed gradually into the national health services. Traditional medicine systems, including for both ambulatory and inpatient services have been in existence for longer than the allopathic services. They receive a separate government allocation. Government health expenditure for this system accounts for less than 1% of CHE (2017). The utilization of traditional medicine is limited when compared to services provided by the allopathic system. There are specific illnesses, usually of a chronic nature, for which traditional medicine is sought after most often by the population.

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Articles inside

9. Appendices ................................................................................................ 206 9.1 References

21min
pages 230-247

9.3 About the authors

4min
pages 250-254

7.6 Transparency and accountability

18min
pages 220-229

9.2 HiT methodology and production process

2min
pages 248-249

7.4 Health outcomes, health service outcomes and quality of care

5min
pages 203-205

7.3 User experience and equity of access to health care

14min
pages 195-202

7.1 Objectives of the health system

4min
pages 182-183

7. Assessment of the health system .......................................................... 157 Chapter summary

1min
page 181

6.3 Future developments

10min
pages 174-180

developments in Sri Lanka

1min
page 164

6.2 Analysis of recent major reforms

17min
pages 165-173

6. Principal health reforms ......................................................................... 139 Chapter summary

1min
page 163

medicine

2min
page 162

5.11 Mental health care

5min
pages 157-159

5.13 Health services for specific populations

1min
page 161

5.8 Rehabilitation

3min
pages 153-154

5.7 Pharmaceutical care

3min
pages 151-152

5.6 Emergency care

2min
page 150

5.2 Curative care services

3min
pages 145-146

5.4 Inpatient care

3min
pages 148-149

4.2 Human resources

6min
pages 117-120

5. Provision of services ................................................................................ 113 Chapter summary

1min
page 137

4.1 Physical resources

1min
page 104

4. Physical and human resources ................................................................ 78 Chapter summary

3min
pages 102-103

3.7 Payment mechanisms

1min
pages 100-101

3.6 Other financing

1min
page 99

Figure 3.8 OOP spending on health by expenditure deciles, 2016

11min
pages 86-92

3.5 Voluntary private health insurance

3min
pages 97-98

3.2 Sources of revenue and financial flows

2min
pages 81-82

3.3 Overview of the public financing schemes

2min
page 85

Figure 3.6 Financing system related to health-care provision

1min
page 83

3. Health financing ......................................................................................... 48 Chapter summary

1min
page 72

2.9 Patient empowerment

7min
pages 68-71

2.8 Regulation

8min
pages 64-67

2.7 Health information management

5min
pages 61-63

2.6 Intersectorality

3min
pages 59-60

2.4 Decentralization and centralization

3min
pages 56-57

2.2 Overview of the health system

1min
page 52

2.1 Historical background

2min
page 51

2.3 Organization

1min
page 53

2. Organization and governance ................................................................... 26 Chapter summary

1min
page 50

1. Introduction .................................................................................................. 1 Chapter summary

1min
page 25

1.4 Health status

11min
pages 37-43

1.3 Political context

2min
page 36

1.5 Human-induced and natural disasters

3min
pages 48-49

Figure 1.1 Map of Sri Lanka

1min
pages 27-28

1.1 Geography and sociodemography

1min
page 26

1.2 Economic context

2min
page 35

1 Analysis of the significant health reforms that affected health

2min
page 30
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