Jamkesmas Health Service Fee Waiver
Macroeconomic growth and incomes have been on the rise since the Asian Financial Crisis (AFC), but health service utilization and health outcomes in Indonesia have been slower to improve. Jamkesmas could provide valuable benefits by allowing cardho...
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Jakarta
2017
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/631981468044113991/Jamkesmas-health-service-fee-waiver http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26696 |
Summary: | Macroeconomic growth and incomes have
been on the rise since the Asian Financial Crisis (AFC), but
health service utilization and health outcomes in Indonesia
have been slower to improve. Jamkesmas could provide
valuable benefits by allowing cardholders to acquire
preventative, curative, and catastrophic health care
services without fees. When it promotes healthy households,
keeps students active, alert, and participating in their
education, returns adults to work sooner, and saves
households from the high costs of healthcare,
Jamkesmas' sizeable individual benefits should be
matched by increased social benefits resulting from a
healthy and productive population. Jamkesmas has been
provided to poor households, but many non-poor have also
received Jamkesmas benefits due to dual central and local
targeting processes which have led to frequent mismatches
and errors in coverage. Health service providers find
Jamkesmas difficult and costly to implement resulting in
fewer services provided, and funds spent, on Jamkesmas
beneficiaries. Local regulations regarding public health
center management often conflict with Jamkesmas mandates,
leaving health service providers confused and unwilling to
use Jamkesmas funds to provide Jamkesmas beneficiaries with
planned services. The future costs of an improved Jamkesmas
program have not been adequately publicized and
Jamkesmas' financial, fiscal, and political
sustainability is uncertain. |
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