Compare: Benefits package

Joint Learning Network for Universal Health Coverage

The Joint Learning Network for Universal Health Coverage systematically documents the reforms of its member countries and other countries that have expanded health coverage through demand-side financing. The case studies contained in these pages are brief, comparative and modular in nature, describing the key highlights and technical features of each program.


Compare various dimensions of country reform efforts using our interactive tool.


Program Types of benefits Benefits package
Vietnam: Compulsory and Voluntary Health Insurance Schemes
  • Comprehensive

HCFP offers a comprehensive benefits package that includes both inpatient and outpatient care. Excluded are interventions covered by vertical programs such as HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, treatments not yet approved by the MoH, various “luxury” interventions such as cosmetic surgery, certain dental procedures, and treatment of self-inflicted injuries and drug addiction, among others.

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HCFP offers a comprehensive benefits package that includes both inpatient and outpatient care. Excluded are interventions covered by vertical programs such as HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, treatments not yet approved by the MoH, various “luxury” interventions such as cosmetic surgery, certain dental procedures, and treatment of self-inflicted injuries and drug addiction, among others.

The benefits package is essentially the same for everyone, except the poor, children under 6, pensioners, and meritorious persons who are exempted from copayment or have lower copayment rate. The following services are covered under all health programs: medical consultation, diagnosis and treatment, X-ray and laboratory tests, functional examination, imaging diagnosis, drugs listed by the MoH, blood and transfusion, surgery, antenatal examination and delivery. In addition to these items, the insurance also covers the cost (up to a certain limit) of a defined list of high-technology treatments (including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), hemodialysis and laser surgery among a total of 177 specified high-tech procedures).

The following exemptions, some of which are covered by the national target programs, are imposed: leprosy, tuberculosis, malaria, schizophrenia, epilepsy, STD, vaccination, convalescence, early-detected pregnancy, medical check-ups, family planning services and infertility treatments, prosthesis, aesthetic surgery, artificial arm, leg, tooth, glasses, hearing-aid machines, occupational diseases, war injuries, accidents at work place, treatment for suicide, self-inflicted injuries, drug addiction, medical appraisal, forensic appraisal, mental examination, home care, rehabilitation and delivery.

Colombia: General System of Social Security in Health
  • Comprehensive

One controversial component of the Colombian health system is that CR members—the wealthier—receive a richer benefits package than the poorer SR members. The CR benefits package covers all levels of care including inpatient, outpatient, maternity leave, and sick leave. The SR package covers all low-complexity care and catastrophic illnesses but provides only limited coverage for most hospital care and no short term disability coverage.

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One controversial component of the Colombian health system is that CR members—the wealthier—receive a richer benefits package than the poorer SR members. The CR benefits package covers all levels of care including inpatient, outpatient, maternity leave, and sick leave. The SR package covers all low-complexity care and catastrophic illnesses but provides only limited coverage for most hospital care and no short term disability coverage. The SR is complemented by services provided by public hospitals, financed through direct payments to providers from the state, independent of what services they supply and of patients’ insurance status.

Kyrgyz Republic: Mandatory Health Insurance Fund (MHIF)
  • Comprehensive

Entitlements of coverage under the MHIF were introduced under the State Guarantee Benefits Package (SGBP). The specifications of the SGBP are the following:

  • Primary care is provided free of charge for the entire population with certain lab and diagnostic tests against copayment.
  • Hospital care is provided against formal copayment.
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Entitlements of coverage under the MHIF were introduced under the State Guarantee Benefits Package (SGBP). The specifications of the SGBP are the following:

  • Primary care is provided free of charge for the entire population with certain lab and diagnostic tests against copayment.
  • Hospital care is provided against formal copayment. Copayment is a flat fee payable upon admission.
  • Exemption categories were designed based on categorical targeting and disease types to protect populations with high expected health care use. Providers receive a higher payment for treating exempt patients to prevent selection bias.
  • An additional outpatient drug benefit was also introduced to subsidize the price of medicines for primary care sensitive conditions in order to reduce unnecessary hospitalizations (e.g., anemia, ulcers, pneumonia, and hypertension).

The Additional Drug Package (ADP) was introduced in 2000 as a way of reinforcing the importance of primary care. It started in seven pharmacies and was slowly rolled out to the entire country by 2003. The ADP is an outpatient drug benefit for those insured with the MHIF, which initially included 37 generic drugs but has expanded since. To purchase drugs through the ADP, the patient pays a discounted price at the pharmacy and the MHIF reimburses the pharmacy for the difference. The subsidy amount is based on a reference price and is approximately 50% of the reference price.

Mali: Mutuelles
  • Comprehensive

The social protection policy aims to have the three systems cover the same services. The laws and decrees assured consistency in the services between the AMO and RAMED when the two organizations were founded.

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The social protection policy aims to have the three systems cover the same services. The laws and decrees assured consistency in the services between the AMO and RAMED when the two organizations were founded.

For the Mutuelles, payment for services is not yet consistent. The risks that the Mutuelles cover as they exist today in Mali are paid for partially or completely for the following:

  • Preventive and promotional health: pre- and post-natal consultation, monitoring of healthy infants, vaccination, family planning, health education, sanitation, etc.
  • Curative care: consultations, nursing care, drugs, laboratory tests, chronic diseases, malnutrition and nutritional rehabilitation, etc.
  • Hospital care: hospital stays, medical and surgical procedures, and drugs
  • Specialized care: consultation of specialist physicians, medical procedures such as radiology, clinical biology, dental and eye care, etc.
  • Patient transportation: emergency transportation, referrals

Most Mutuelles limit themselves to the services provided at the first level of contact, which is the community health center (CSCOM), where patients receive the first level of care, but not for the more costly risks. The national Mutuelle extension strategy seeks to bridge this gap through the Mutuelle Support Fund by paying for care at the secondary and tertiary levels. With regard to standardizing the services that are covered, the starting point is the package of services covered by the AMO and RAMED, with certain modifications possible for more comprehensive coverage of preventive care, in particular for reproductive health.

Table 3: Package of services covered, 2010

SystemServices covered
AMO and RAMED
  • Outpatient care (medical consultations, nursing care, dental care, medical imaging, laboratory tests and minor surgery)
  • Hospitalization (hospital stay costs, medical procedures, surgery and medical techniques, transportation expenses)
  • Pharmaceuticals (list of approved drugs)
  • Maternity services (medical and drug costs, tests, hospitalization for pregnancy, delivery and its effects up to week 8)
Mutuelles
  • Preventive and promotional health (Pre- and post-natal consultation, monitoring healthy infants, vaccination, family planning, health education, sanitation, etc.
  • Curative care (Consultations, nursing care, drugs, laboratory testing, chronic diseases, malnutrition and nutrition rehabilitation, etc.)

Source: Ministry of Social Protection

Rwanda: Mutuelles de Sante
  • Comprehensive

The benefits package in Rwanda has two primary parts: the Minimum Package of Activities (MPA) and the Complementary Package of Activities (CPA). The MPA covers all services and drugs provided at the health centers including pre- and post-natal care, vaccinations, family planning, minor surgical operations, and essential and generic drugs. All individuals in Rwanda with health insurance are entitled to comprehensive, subsidized preventative care through the MPA. The CPA covers a limited number of services at the district hospitals, including the cost of hospitalization, caesarian operations, minor and major surgical operations, medical imaging, and all diseases afflicting children ages 0 to 5 years.

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The benefits package in Rwanda has two primary parts: the Minimum Package of Activities (MPA) and the Complementary Package of Activities (CPA). The MPA covers all services and drugs provided at the health centers including pre- and post-natal care, vaccinations, family planning, minor surgical operations, and essential and generic drugs. All individuals in Rwanda with health insurance are entitled to comprehensive, subsidized preventative care through the MPA. The CPA covers a limited number of services at the district hospitals, including the cost of hospitalization, caesarian operations, minor and major surgical operations, medical imaging, and all diseases afflicting children ages 0 to 5 years. As of 2006, the CPA benefits package was extended to cover select services in national hospitals. In order to receive these benefits, individuals must be referred from the health centers to district or national level hospitals.

Mutuelle members are entitled to comprehensive benefits for primary care, secondary care, and tertiary care provided through public or private non-profit contracted facilities. The scheme provides basic services such as family planning, pre-natal care, consultations, basic laboratory examinations, generic drugs, and hospital treatment. All medications from hospitals are also included in the benefits.

For those covered under RAMA, benefits include all the major preventative services in addition to all curative services and pharmaceuticals. The benefits package for MMI is the same as RAMA, with the addition of prostheses coverage added under MMI. Excluded are contact lenses and braces as well as cosmetic surgery for purely aesthetic reasons. RAMA and MMI have signed contracts with all public health centers and reference hospitals, as well as 16 private institutions. MMI has the added advantage of using military hospitals, thus, individuals covered under these plans are able to access health care benefits at almost all health centers in Rwanda.

Korea, Rep.: National Health Insurance Program
  • Comprehensive

The benefit package for the National Health Insurance Program began small and was extended incrementally, because extension of population coverage was prioritized over expansion of benefits. Currently, benefits are the same for all insured individuals, regardless of whether they are self-employed or not. Both preventative and curative services are included in the benefits package. Preventative services include biannual check-ups and vaccination. For curative services, the insured are entitled to in-patient and outpatient care, dental services, traditional oriental medicines, and prescription medication. Procedures excluded from coverage include treatment for simple fatigue, superficial dermatology problems, cosmetic surgery, urogenic and gynecological diseases which cause no problems in everyday life, treatment of addiction to narcotics, and orthodontics.

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The benefit package for the National Health Insurance Program began small and was extended incrementally, because extension of population coverage was prioritized over expansion of benefits. Currently, benefits are the same for all insured individuals, regardless of whether they are self-employed or not. Both preventative and curative services are included in the benefits package. Preventative services include biannual check-ups and vaccination. For curative services, the insured are entitled to in-patient and outpatient care, dental services, traditional oriental medicines, and prescription medication. Procedures excluded from coverage include treatment for simple fatigue, superficial dermatology problems, cosmetic surgery, urogenic and gynecological diseases which cause no problems in everyday life, treatment of addiction to narcotics, and orthodontics.

Services are provided without a referral in all non-specialized health centers. To visit a specialized general hospital the patient must have a referral. Co-payments are required for all medical procedures. The amount of co-payment depends on the level of medical care received and whether the procedure was in-patient or out-patient. When an insured individual pays more than the co-payment ceiling—about 3 million Won or $2,400 USD—within 6 consecutive months, he or she is exempted from further co-payments. The co-payments are higher for hospitals than for physician clinics in order to encourage people to visit physician clinics before hospitals.

Table 1: Co-payment system

ClassificationPortion of health care costs
Inpatient10-20% of total treatment cost
Outpatient
- Tertiary care hospitalPer visit consultation fee + 50% of treatment cost
- General hospital50% of (treatment cost + per visit consultation fee)
- Hospital40% of (treatment cost + per visit consultation fee)
- Clinic30% of treatment cost
- Pharmacy30% of total cost

Source: Song, Young Joo. “The South Korean Health Care System” JMAJ, Vol. 52, No. 3: 207. 2009.

Out of pocket (OOP) expenditures have been reduced drastically since the expansion of health insurance coverage, from 63% of total health expenditure in 1983 to 38% of total health expenditure in 2008. However, despite this improvement, the share of OOP payments is still greater than the OECD average, and some scholars suggest that this is still a substantial barrier to medical care utilization across different socio-economic groups.

Ghana: National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS)
  • Comprehensive

The basic benefits package is fairly extensive and purports to cover 95% of all health problems reported in Ghanaian health care facilities, though there is a noticeable emphasis on female reproductive health. Expensive, highly specialized care such as dialysis and organ transplants are not covered by the NHIS. ARVs for the treatment of HIV/AIDS are also not covered as these drugs are supplied by a separate government program.

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The basic benefits package is fairly extensive and purports to cover 95% of all health problems reported in Ghanaian health care facilities, though there is a noticeable emphasis on female reproductive health. Expensive, highly specialized care such as dialysis and organ transplants are not covered by the NHIS. ARVs for the treatment of HIV/AIDS are also not covered as these drugs are supplied by a separate government program.

The health services covered by the NHIS are laid out in the minimum basic benefits package. The list also delineates prescribed medicines. Benefits for maternity care include antenatal care, caesarean sections, and postnatal care for up to six months after birth. Treatment for breast and cervical cancer are included in the package, although treatment for other cancers is not.

NHIS Benefits Package

Outpatient services

  • General and specialist consultation services
  • General and specialist diagnostic testing, including laboratory investigation, X-rays, ultrasound scanning
  • Medicines on the NHIS medicines list
  • Surgical operations such as hernia repair
  • Physiotherapy

Inpatient services

  • General and specialist inpatient care
  • Diagnostic tests
  • Medication - prescribed medicines on the NHIS medicines list, blood and blood products
  • Surgical operations
  • Inpatient physiotherapy
  • Accommodation in the general ward
  • Feeding (where available)

Oral health

  • Pain relief (tooth extraction, temporary incision and drainage)
  • Dental restoration (simple amalgam filling, temporary dressing)

Maternity care

  • Antenatal care
  • Deliveries (normal and assisted)
  • Caesarean section
  • Postnatal care

Emergencies

  • Medical emergencies
  • Surgical emergencies
  • Pediatric emergencies
  • Obstetric and gynecological emergencies
  • Road traffic accident

Exclusions list

  • Appliance and prostheses including optical aids, heart aids, orthopedic aids, dentures, etc.
  • Cosmetic surgeries and aesthetic treatment
  • HIV retroviral drugs
  • Assisted reproduction (e.g., artificial insemination) and gynecological hormone replacement therapy
  • Echocardiography
  • Photography and angiography
  • Dialysis for chronic renal failure
  • Organ transplantation
  • All drugs not listed on the NHIS list
  • Heart and brain surgery other than those resulting from accidents
  • Cancer treatment other than breast and cervical
  • Mortuary services
  • Diagnosis and treatment abroad
  • Medical examinations for purposes other than treatment in accredited health facilities
  • VIP ward accommodation
Kenya: National Hospital Insurance Fund
  • Primarily Inpatient

The benefits package includes coverage of inpatient expenses with the share of expenses covered determined largely by the type of hospital. The NHIF’s hospital network is broken into three tiers of hospitals. At “Contract A” hospitals, which include primarily government hospitals, NHIF beneficiaries receive comprehensive cover with no overall limit on the amount of benefits received.

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The benefits package includes coverage of inpatient expenses with the share of expenses covered determined largely by the type of hospital. The NHIF’s hospital network is broken into three tiers of hospitals. At “Contract A” hospitals, which include primarily government hospitals, NHIF beneficiaries receive comprehensive cover with no overall limit on the amount of benefits received. At “Contract B” hospitals, which include certain non-state providers (e.g., non-profit private hospitals, mission hospitals, and private hospitals in rural areas or areas not sufficiently served by the public sector), coverage remains comprehensive, but an annual limit of 432,000 KES per member (including the member and all dependents) applies. At “Contract B” hospitals, certain high cost surgeries may also carry a co-pay, which can be as high as 80% of the professional portion of the cost (with facility and hospitalization charges still covered with no co-pay). Finally, at “Contract C” hospitals, which include many higher cost private hospitals, the NHIF provides a rebate only, which generally ranges from KES 400 to KES 2,000 per day of hospitalization. Stays over 5 days in “Contract C” hospitals require prior authorization, and the total number of days covered in this type of hospital cannot exceed 180 days per beneficiary annually.

The benefits package includes comprehensive medical coverage for maternity cases. NHIF works with a wide network of over 600 accredited Government, private and mission health providers spread across the country and reimburses hospital claims as per agreed contracts. In 2010, changes were gazetted that call for an increase in contributions from members. The increase in charges would include an expansion of services to outpatient care, including unlimited general consultation with doctors, unlimited prescribed laboratory tests, medicines, as well as coverage of all costs related to diseases that require specialists, and the unlimited management of chronic illnesses and ailments such as HIV/AIDs, diabetes, and hypertension. These changes in member contributions and services are under judicial review and have not yet been fully implemented.

Preventative care currently falls outside of the NHIF and under the purview of the Ministry of Health. Preventative care available to all Kenyans includes a number of services that were originally defined under the NHSSP 2. The benefits extended to the population depend on cohort life stage, and are provided primarily by the Ministry of Health (MOH), local governments, and parastatal organizations.

Mexico: Seguro Popular
  • Comprehensive

The design of the Seguro Popular essential benefits package was informed by two key sets of analytical inputs. The first set of analytical tools was composed of estimates of the burden of disease used to assess the severity of different health problems. The second set was made up of cost-effectiveness analyses used to weigh the potential population-level benefits of distinct interventions against their financial costs. The first benefits package was selected in 2002 and consisted of 78 health interventions. These interventions included primarily preventive activities as well as the detection and treatment of degenerative diseases.

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The design of the Seguro Popular essential benefits package was informed by two key sets of analytical inputs. The first set of analytical tools was composed of estimates of the burden of disease used to assess the severity of different health problems. The second set was made up of cost-effectiveness analyses used to weigh the potential population-level benefits of distinct interventions against their financial costs. The first benefits package was selected in 2002 and consisted of 78 health interventions. These interventions included primarily preventive activities as well as the detection and treatment of degenerative diseases. In 2004, the number of interventions increased to 91 and by 2005 the number increased to 155. In 2006-2007, the number of covered interventions increased significantly up to 255 interventions, covering most causes of primary care visits and nearly 95% of all causes of hospital admissions. As of 2009, there were 266 interventions that were covered under the Universal Catalog of Health Services (CAUSES).

The benefits package can be divided into six distinct categories of services as follows:

  • 24 public health interventions geared towards the detection and prevention of diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, and tuberculosis.
  • 104 interventions within family medicine and specialist care
  • 25 interventions for urgent care and
  • 69 interventions for general surgery
  • 45 hospitalization interventions
  • 8 odontology interventions.

There is also a distinct benefits package for protection against catastrophic expenditures. This centrally managed fund, known as the Protection Fund Against Catastrophic Expenditures (FPGC) covered 17 interventions in 2006. By 2010, the number of interventions grew to 49 and included treatment for HIV/AIDS, bone marrow transplant, and childhood cancer. Care for most of these catastrophic events (84%) is provided by private service providers.

Brazil: Unified Health System (SUS)
  • Comprehensive

Brazil’s health system offers free, universal coverage. Care under the SUS is divided into basic, specialized, and high complexity categories. Basic care is composed of health promotion and disease prevention. Care is deemed specialized if the intervention requires the use of a medical specialist. Finally, complex care is composed of interventions that require the use of advanced technology and equipment.

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Brazil’s health system offers free, universal coverage. Care under the SUS is divided into basic, specialized, and high complexity categories. Basic care is composed of health promotion and disease prevention. Care is deemed specialized if the intervention requires the use of a medical specialist. Finally, complex care is composed of interventions that require the use of advanced technology and equipment.

The PSF’s original priority areas were: women’s health, child health, hypertension, diabetes, tuberculosis, leprosy, HIV, oral health, and health promotion.