HÀ NỘI – Some 50 hospitals will impose a fee hike for people
without health insurance from Thursday (June 1).
The fees will be applicable at special-class and first-class
hospitals of the Ministry of Health and hospitals under sectors.
The fee hike for the uninsured will be imposed in 30
provinces in August, another 15 provinces in October and the remaining 18
provinces in December.
Accordingly, nearly 1,900 different services and products at
public healthcare facilities will become more expensive for the uninsured.
Healthcare service fees that have been adjusted include
those for health check, technical service and testing.
Specifically, the fee for a health check will increase from
VNĐ20,000 (US$0.8) to VNĐ39,000 ($1.7)
at special-class and first-class hospitals.
Bed charge for intensive care and for patients undergoing
organ transplants at special-class hospitals will hike from VNĐ354,000 ($15) to
VNĐ677,000 ($29).
Operation and surgery fees will be more expensive by 20 to
30 per cent.
Lê Văn Phúc, deputy head of Việt Nam Social Insurance’s
Health Insurance Policy Department, said the fee hike this time is significant
for in-patients, patients being treated for a long period without holding
health insurance or those using technical services and testing. For example,
positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT) will cost over
VNĐ20million ($867).
The move makes the fees for the uninsured equal to the
current fees applied for people with health insurance.
“The basic difference between the insured and uninsured is
80-100 per cent of the hospital fee of the insured will be covered, while the
uninsured have to pay 100 per cent,” Phúc said.
According to Nguyễn Nam Liêm, head of the ministry’s
Department of Planning and Finance, the similar hospital fee for both groups --
the insured and the uninsured -- is to ensure equality and encourage people to
buy healthcare insurance.
According to the health ministry, Việt Nam currently has 75
million health insurance cardholders, or 81.3 per cent of the population, which
means nearly 20 per cent of the country is uninsured, most of whom have above
average living standards.
The health ministry is encouraging nearly 20 per cent of
uninsured population to buy health insurance to avoid financial burden in case
of sickness.
A healthcare insurance card in Việt Nam can be bought at
more than VNĐ600,000 ($26) per year and comes with huge benefits. – VNS
source
Friday, June 2, 2017
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