Operational Material
Private Health Presentation Outline Introduction Pharmaceutical Products Other Medical Products and Therapeutic Appliances OutPatient Services 2
Introduction (1) Private health is classified as one of the comparison resistant areas relating to household consumption; this is due to Overall complexity of the healthcare market Differing national arrangements to produce healthcare services Special knowledge needed to comprehend the area As a result special attention is required for activities involving the comparison of health related products and services across countries 3
Introduction (2) Basic Headings relating to health products and services are split into household and government expenditures Household expenditure consists of: 7 BHs 6 BHs Price surveys 1 BH Reference PPPs Hospital services BH Government expenditure consists it of: 12 BHs 11 BHs Reference PPPs 1 BH Input approach Compensation of employees BH This presentation covers those household expenditure BHs to which price collection is carried 4
Introduction (3) INDIVIDUAL CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE BY HOUSEHOLDS HEALTH MEDICAL PRODUCTS, APPLIANCES AND EQUIPMENT BHs Pharmaceuticalproducts Other medical products Price survey Price survey Therapeutic appliances and equipment Price survey OUTPATIENT SERVICES BHs Medical Services Dental services Price survey Price survey Paramedical services Price survey HOSPITAL SERVICES BH Medical Services Reference PPP 5
Introduction (4) Despite being a comparison resistant area, the overall survey process follows normal household consumption price surveys: Regional item lists consist of both Global Core List items as well as region specific items Price collections are to be carrier out quarterly in order to establish sound annualaverage average prices Normal 2011 ICP routines are to be followed on importance Prices and resulting PPPs are to be validated at country, region and global levels Discussions on the specificities relating to national healthcare systems are encouraged in order to ensure comparability of the collected prices 6
Pharmaceutical Products Pharmaceutical Products constitute a large component of household consumption. The survey for these products is special as it: Involves specifically trained staff, meticulously designed item specifications and a specific survey design Is designed by the ICP Global Office in cooperation with ICP regional coordinating agencies and World Bank Health Department The developed Global Core List (GCL) includes 43 internationally essential drugs The aim of the exercise is to guarantee consistency in commonly prescribed medicines to ensure comparability across countries and ICP regions 7
Item definitions (1) The identification of pharmaceutical products is based on the following parameters: Active Substance Active ingredient of the medicine; prices are to be obtained only for the specified substance Dosage Amount of active ingredient in a single dosage Dosages on the list are typical; if it differs from the observed one, theinformation onthis should bereported Total quantity of the specified drug to be priced Quantity Product examples It is not required dthat t the observed quantity is exactly the preferred quantity as specified in the list; the prices will be recalculated to the preferred quantity Meant to facilitate the understanding of the product description; they are not necessarily the actual samples to be surveyed 8
Item definitions (2) In addition distinction is made between: Branded drugs Generic drugs Medicines produced and sold by their innovative pharmaceutical companies Identical, or bioequivalent i medicines, to an existing eisting brandname medicine in dosage form, safety, strength, route of administration, quality, performance characteristicsandintended and intended use Typically sold at lower prices than the branded product; the cost of I bioequivalence testing and the actual manufacturing will be only a part of the original costs II In general, the only differences between the brandname product and the generics are the price and the trade name(s) 9
Item definitions (3) It is important not to compare price quotations for branded and generic drugs directly The resulting PPPs would be heavily biased The Global Core List (GCL) of pharmaceutical products classifies each item either as: Branded pharmaceutical product (referred as Original or International brand in the GCL); OR Genericpharmaceutical product (referred as Generic or Generic brand in the GCL) It is crucial that this distinction is followed when the products are priced; specialists (e.g. pharmacists) are well informed about the brandstatus of available products 10
Prices to be reported Theoutcomeofthesurveyistobeasetofsound nationalaverage prices for pharmaceutical products Prices are computed on the basis of a quarterly survey of individual price quotations for each active substance (product) in the list Regarding price sources, preference is given to officially registered pharmacies in capital and major cities of the country All reported prices are to be full market prices I Full market price II This price is the total price for a specified drug received by the seller, including all potential government subsidies = Price paid by an individual In case data on the subsidies is not available for each specified drug, an estimated flat rate of subsidies should be applied on the reported prices + Potential government subsidy 11
Other Medical Products and Therapeutic Appliances The GCL includes 9 items for the Other Medical Products and Therapeutic Appliances and Equipment BHs Normal ICP routines are applicable regarding the employed types of item definitions, sampling of outlets and price collection Items cover products such as absorbent cotton wool and contact lenses Prices observed in other types of outlets than pharmacies (e.g. supermarkets, lowcost optician chains, Internet shops) shall be reported in accordance with their share in sales volume The shop sample has to be representative; as significant price differences are expected, relying only on one or the other shop type would not give correct national average prices 12
Out-Patient Services OutPatient Services covers 3 BHs and 12 GCL items OutPatient Services Mdi Medical lservices BH 5 GCL items Dental Services BH Paramedical Services BH 2 GCL items 5 GCL items 12 GCL items Items cover services such as sight test examination, extraction of a tooth and standard blood test Prices for the outpatient health services are to be collected only fromprivate service providers Respectively no items are to be surveyed referring to public service providers This is because segment for the public service providers is covered by the BHs relating to Health expenditure by government and different comparison approaches are employed for these BHs 13
Service providers The applied distinction between private and public service providers should be in line with National Accounts: Economically Prices that have a significant effect on the amounts that producers significant are willing to supply and on the amounts purchasers wish to buy Private (market) producers Public (nonmarket) producers Establishment whose all or most of output is market production Provide all or most of its output to others at prices that are economically significant Establishments owned by government units or NPISHs that supply goods or services free, or at prices that t are not economically significant, to households or the community as a whole Most of their activity will be undertaken on a nonmarket basis 14
Prices to be reported All reported prices are to be full market prices The full market price is the total amount that the private service provider receives for supplying the health service specified Special attention is required since this can be sum of payments made by different actors: Households Government Private insurance companies NonGovernmental Organizations (NGOs), NPISHs or other health related actors If the prices paid by the households are not full market prices, the shares paid by the other actors should be obtained It is crucial to ensure that all relevant price Information is collected during the survey in order to calculate and report the full market prices 15
Pricing scenarios (1) Reporting full market prices in a situation where a sum of payments can be made by different actors results in 4 different pricing scenarios: Full payment by household h at purchase 1 Household pays the full market price to This is the price to be the private service provider reported The fact that the household may be subsequently reimbursed by the government or a health insurer is not relevant Prices can be obtained directly from the private service provider 16
Pricing scenarios (2) Partial payment by household at purchase 2 Household pay only partof the full market price to the private service provider Private health insurer, NGO or NPISH paying the remaining part The price to be reported isthe "composite price i.e. the amount paid by the household + plus the amount paid by the other actor(s) to the private service provider Prices can be obtained from the private service providers, but information may need to be collected from other sources as well 3 Full payment by government at purchase Household paysnothing to the private service provider and the government covers the entire market price The price to be reported is the amount paid by the government to the private service provider The national social security system has usually price lists for different health services 17
4 Pricing scenarios (3) Full payment by private insurer, NGO or NPISH at purchase Household pays snothing to the private service provider and the private insurer, NGO, or NPISH pays the full market price Thepriceto be reported isthe amount paid by the private insurer, NGO or NPISH to the private service provider Prices can be obtained from the private service providers, but information may need to be collected from other sources as well Potential difficulties in pricing It may happen that actual price doesn't exists for a particular service; only a lump sum from the government private insurers, NGOs or NPISHs to a private service provider Due to the differences in National Health Service systems, the NCs should study the particular cases and find the best approaches to establish reliable full market prices for the specified health services 18
THANK YOU 19