Financing institutional long-term care for the elderly in China: a policy evaluation of new models

A rapid ageing population coupled with changes in family structure has brought about profound implications to social policy in China. Although the past decade has seen a steady increase in public funding to long-term care (LTC), the narrow financing base and vast population have created significant...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health policy and planning 2016-12, Vol.31 (10), p.1391-1401
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Wei, He, Alex Jingwei, Fang, Lijie, Mossialos, Elias
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A rapid ageing population coupled with changes in family structure has brought about profound implications to social policy in China. Although the past decade has seen a steady increase in public funding to long-term care (LTC), the narrow financing base and vast population have created significant unmet demand, calling for reforms in financing. This paper focuses on the financing of institutional LTC care by examining new models that have emerged from local policy experiments against two policy goals: equity and efficiency. Three emerging models are explored: Social Health Insurance (SHI) in Shanghai, LTC Nursing Insurance (LTCNI) in Qingdao andameans-testedmodelinNanjing. Afocusedsystematic narrative review of academic and grey literature is conducted to identify and assess these models, supplemented with qualitative interviews with government officials from relevant departments, care home staff and service users. This paper argues that, although SHI appears to be a convenient solution to fund LTC, this model has led to systematic bias in affordable access among participants of different insurance schemes, and has created a powerful incentive for the over-provision of unnecessary services. The means-tested method has been remarkably constrained by narrow eligibility and insufficiency of funding resources. The LTCNI model is by far the most desirable policy option among the three studied here, but the narrow definition of eligibility has substantively excluded a large proportion of elders in need from access to care, which needs to be addressed in future reforms. This paper proposes three lines of LTC financing reforms for policy-makers: (1) the establishment of a prepaid financing mechanism pooled specifically for LTC costs; (2) the incorporation of more stringent eligibility rules and needs assessment; and (3) reforming the dominant fee-for-service methods in paying LTC service providers. Le vieillissement rapide de la population associé à des mutations de la structure familiale a entraîné de profondes implications pour la politique sociale en Chine. Bien qu’on ait été témoins d’une augmentation constante du financement public des soins de longue durée (SLD) au cours de la dernière décennie, l’étroite base de financement et l’immense population ont créé une demande non satisfaite, appelant à des réformes dans le financement. Le présent document met l’accent sur le financement institutionnel des soins SLD en examinant de nouveaux modèles qui ont émergé d
ISSN:0268-1080
1460-2237
DOI:10.1093/heapol/czw081