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I-man some data on no user fee.

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  • I-man some data on no user fee.

    Poor benefiting more from free health care - CaPRI survey

    Published: Monday | June 10, 2013 0 Comments


    Patients await assistance at the Hagley Park Health Centre in St Andrew. - FILE





    The poorest of Jamaicans are making greater use of public hospitals and the free healthcare they offer, a survey carried out by the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CaPRI) has revealed.Conducting a review of the no-user-fee policy which was introduced in public hospitals five years ago, CaPRI has presented scientific evidence of the use of the system.
    Covering all 14 parishes, between April 15 and May 20, the think tank investigated the effect of the no-user-fee policy on health services in Jamaica and explored the scope for returning to a fee-paying system in the future.
    The study revealed that 62.9 per cent of those who used the public facilities were persons in the lower income group, compared to the 6.6 per cent of the higher income earners who admitted to using public hospitals.
    The poorer class made up a great percentage of the 76.3 per cent without health insurance who took advantage of free health care, compared to the 23.7 per cent of those with insurance who used it.
    Interestingly, the study also revealed that the elderly, 65 and over, used public hospitals the least (6.6 per cent). In fact, adults between the ages of 25 and 64 made greater use of the facilities (77.5 per cent).
    There were more female patients (54 per cent) than males (46 per cent).
    More educated use system
    The level of education was also a factor in the study, with 58.5 per cent of those with a secondary education claiming to use public hospitals. Those with no formal education only made up 1.9 per cent.
    Of those surveyed, the majority (59 per cent) said they only visited the hospital when it was necessary.
    As part of its commitment to universal access to health care, in 2008 the Bruce Golding administration removed user fees for services at public hospitals, except the University Hospital of the West Indies. This was a significant departure from a user-fee policy reintroduced in 1984.
    Last Friday, the Government hosted the first of four public consultations in Manchester on the no-user-fee policy. Minister of Health Dr Fenton Ferguson is promoting the consultations as part of the administration's efforts to review the system. It will allow members of the public to put forward ideas and possible solutions for financing health care in Jamaica.
    Following today's session in Kingston, the consultations continue in St Ann on Wednesday and St James on June 23.
    The health ministry has already had separate consultations with Opposition Spokesman on Health Dr Ken Baugh, health groups and associations, as well as the management and staff of the ministry and regional health authorities.
    The CaPRI study was carried out with the aid of grants from the International Development Research Centre in Ottawa, Canada, The Gleaner Company Limited, and the National Health Fund.
    anastasia.cunningham@gleanerjm.com
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    But we must expect more to use it if it free? That was not in doubt.

    Anyway at least they are doing some kind of assessment to see if there is a more sustainable model.


    BTW more students attend an institution called a high school now too, but the overall education standard is no better.
    "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

    Comment


    • #3
      Problem with that analogy is that there is not much threat of ending up dead or disabled if yuh don't guh high school...

      Comment


      • #4
        you know what, I heard there are schools in Jamaica with 20 students. Why are those schools not closed and sent somewhere else?? Especially when there are other schools within 5 miles? Exactly, so when it was pay they were no better and when it is "free" they are no better so we need to make everyone have access and look at other things why it is not getting better. It is not only that "you show up, you learn".

        The fact is politicians in Jamaica are afraid to make the hard but feasible decisions.
        • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

        Comment


        • #5
          True, there is more of a threat of ME ending up dead or disabled because you don't go high school.
          "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

          Comment


          • #6
            no more than obtains now... based on exam results.. bettah dem do something productive in the day time.. plant some crops or raise some fowl..

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