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    HomeAsian HealthHow can the Philippines fix health funding imbalances?

    How can the Philippines fix health funding imbalances?

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    Fragmented spending weakens oversight and blurs priorities.

    Health spending in the Philippines has more than doubled to over P1t in the past decade, yet structural weaknesses mean the surge has yet to translate into more efficient delivery or more equal access, sharpening calls for reform.

    Funding remains split across National Government budgets, local government units, the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth), and other public and private sources, according to the Philippine Institute for Development Studies.

    The fragmented structure dilutes oversight and complicates efforts to direct resources towards system priorities, the state think tank said in a statement, citing a forum in universal health care in November.

    This is despite a long‑term rise in per‑capita health spending from about $50 (P3,000) in 2000 to $198 (P12,000) in recent years.

    Allocation gaps persist across regions, reflecting wide differences in local government capacity and execution. These disparities limit access to services outside major urban centres and weaken the impact of higher national spending, the agency said.

    Hospital‑level data underline the imbalance. An analysis of 5.8 million PhilHealth inpatient claims in 2023 showed that the top 5% of highest‑cost patients accounted for about a fifth of total inpatient reimbursements.

    These cases are largely tied to chronic noncommunicable diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular illness, which require intensive and specialised care.

    Spending is concentrated in Level 3 hospitals and heavily clustered in the National Capital Region, reinforcing geographic disparities in access to advanced treatment.

    By contrast, local health financing remains strained. PIDS estimates the annual cost of delivering a basic primary healthcare package at as much as $31 (P1,900) per person, yet many local government units spend less than that threshold.

    The imbalance leaves frontline care underfunded even as hospital costs absorb a growing share of resources.

    Questions to ponder:

    1. How can health financing be consolidated to reduce fragmentation and improve accountability?
    2. How can policymakers better balance funding between high‑cost tertiary care and underfunded primary care?
       

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