Hong Kong hospital authority will take measures to give patients
more choices of hospital and healthcare services by fee adjustment,
Hong Kong officials said Monday.
At the 13th Hospital Authority (HA) Convention, which opened
here Monday, Hong Kong Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food York
Chow said that an appropriate public hospital fee adjustment is
required to encourage healthy lifestyles and rational use of health
care services, and to discourage inappropriate, unnecessary or
duplicated services.
Chow said this is the principle of any fee revision, adding that
services will continue to be abused at current fee levels.
"So, we need to raise the fees. We want to make sure that this
will encourage people to, first of all, have a healthy lifestyle
and look after their own health. Secondly they can choose the most
appropriate care under family doctors when they have milder
ailments. They only go to the emergency departments when they have
a real emergency situation. We would also discourage people from
long-term stay in hospital simply because it is cheaper than
staying at home," Chow said.
"It should be kept in mind that fees should be maintained at
affordable levels after adjustment, and be capped for patients who
have chronic illness, which requires long-term care," he added.
Chow said the Hospital Authority's private services should be
developed as benchmark services and complementary to other private
services.
However, he called on private doctors and hospitals not to
hastily raise their fees, and to make fees and service standards
more transparent and predictable.
"Experience has shown that doctors and healthcare professionals
who are conscientious, caring and ethical can always survive and
thrive. The government will consider, in the longer term, a
monitoring and licensing system for healthcare service settings,
premises and organizations, so that both private and public
services can be subject to the same level of public scrutiny. It
would also imply that private services, which might then be
eligible for public subsidies and contracts," Chow said.
Chief Executive of Hospital Authority of Hong Kong Shane Solomon
said at the convention that Hospital Authority has many patients
already with the capacity and willingness to pay for these
additional services choices.
According to Hospital Authority data, 23 percent of HA hospital
users have medical insurance or subsidy, and 10 percent, or 200,
000 patients, have monthly income of more than 35,000 Hong Kong
dollars (about US$4,516) each.
Solomon emphasized that more choices of hospital and health care
are needed. The expansion of the private sector will both relieve
demand on HA and shorten waiting times for discretionary areas,
like elective surgery.
Solomon added that more work is needed to be done on what extra
choices should be offered in HA and in expanding choice for
patients. HA would need to be mindful of the wider community
impacts and have adequate community debate, but the focus should
remain on expanding choice for HA's existing patients through
boththe private and public hospital systems.
"If more people can choose to contribute to the cost of their
own care in the public hospital, then HA's own scarce resources can
be directed to lower income patients who are waiting a long period
of time for elective surgery and only have the choice of HA," he
said.
(Xinhua News Agency May 9, 2006)