Moving the Needle for Private Sector Engagement in MNH in
Indonesia
Edhie Santosa Rahmat
Health System Specialist at USAID Indonesia - Office of Health, Budi Kemuliaan St, Jakarta, Indonesia
erahmat
@
usaid.
g
ov
Keywords: Maternal and neonatal care, Private sector, Universal health coverage, Indonesia.
Abstract: A comprehensive assessment for Private sector engagement in Maternal and Neonatal Health care (MNH
care) was done in 9 Indonesia provinces in 2016. The objective of the assessment is to map all existing and
those private sectors who would like to engage in the MNH care after the introduction of Universal Health
Coverage, called as Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN), in Indonesia. This is important as Indonesia is still
challenged by high maternal and neonatal mortalities as compared to peer countries with similar economic
development. While the private sector is growing in recent years, information on their characteristics and
behaviours toward MNH care is limited. This assessment provides a comprehensive analysis of the existing
private sector, their behaviour toward JKN, what the private investors' willingness and challenges to invest
in the MNH care, and what type of services that they are going to enter in the near future. This study also
recommend to the Ministry of Health and other sector in how to provide good regulatory environment and
to incentivize their present to help the country to meet the people demand due to JKN expansion, in
particular in the MNH care.
1 INTRODUCTION
Indonesia is a country undergoing growth in a
multitude of sectors. The country’s middle-income
population is on the rise, its democracy continues to
become more open, and its economy continues to
grow, making Indonesia the largest economy in
Southeast Asia with a gross domestic product (GDP)
over US$861.9 billion (World Bank, 2015). Despite
these positive developments in the country’s
economic landscape, it has yet to take a similar lead
on many health issues.
One area of health that performs poorly on major
indicators is maternal and newborn health. The
maternal mortality ratio has been estimated at 359
deaths per 100,000 live births, much higher than
both the Millennium Development Goal 4 target
ratio of 110 and the ratio in regionally or
economically comparable countries (Statistics
Indonesia, 2013). The decline in child deaths
(Millennium Development Goal 5 target) remains
stalled—primarily due to the lack of reduction in
neonatal mortality, which has remained around 19
deaths per 1,000 live births over the last two
decades.
The government of Indonesia has not
traditionally put high levels of funding into
healthcare, until the inauguration of Jaminan
Kesehatan Nasional (JKN). This national health
insurance scheme scheduled to reach national
coverage by 2019, has signalled a change in
priorities. As of April 2016, 164 million Indonesians
were covered under JKN (Jong and Parlina, 2016).
In 2015, Social Security Management Agency
for the Health Sector, or BPJS-K received US$3.7
billion in premiums (Jong and Parlina, 2016). This
included US$2.1 billion (57% of the total) from
participants and another US$1.6 billion (43%) from
the state budget for covering the poor and
vulnerable, civil servants, and members of the
military (Ernst and Young, 2015). Current public
sector health infrastructure cannot keep up with the
growing number of people gaining financial access
to care. Partnership with the bustling private sector
would allow the government of Indonesia to meet its
universal health coverage goal, and the Indonesian
market is primed for such an opportunity.
The growth of Indonesia’s economy has led to
growing interest from investors, which, importantly,
also includes investment interest in health markets.
20
Rahmat, E.
Moving the Needle for Private Sector Engagement in MNH in Indonesia.
In Proceedings of the 4th Annual Meeting of the Indonesian Health Economics Association (INAHEA 2017), pages 20-24
ISBN: 978-989-758-335-3
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
The establishment of JKN has signalled to the
market that the government is committed to
financing healthcare and increasing access for its
citizens. At the same time, the middle class is
growing, estimated to reach 135 million people by
2030, and utilization of private facilities and
pharmaceuticals is expected to increase as more
people acquire additional resources (Oberman et al.,
2012).
The need for improved maternal and newborn
health, paired with the now drastically increased
market for healthcare in Indonesia, offers a prime
opportunity for others to get involved in ensuring
that health services are high-quality, equitable,
efficient, and effective. Under JKN, reimbursements
related to reproductive and newborn health services
will total at least US$720 million per year in
additional revenue for healthcare providers. The
private sector must all play important roles if
maternal and newborn mortality is to be lowered.
While greater investment in the maternal and
newborn health arena could be a winning situation
for businesses, civil society, and (especially)
mothers, it is important to keep in mind the many
challenges of operating in Indonesia. Indonesia is
home to more than 257.5 million people, a
population that continues to grow (World Bank,
2015). While GDP is on the rise, more than 40
percent of the population (100 million people) is
considered poor or vulnerable (i.e., living on US$2 a
day or less) (World Bank, 2012). Indonesia’s 34
provinces have widely diverse cultures, religions,
and natural resources. From the bustling metropolis
of Jakarta to the ocean-dependent islands of the
Malukus and the indigenous peoples of Papua—each
province has its own context and unique
considerations when it comes to economic and social
development, and thus its own distinct set of
opportunities.
2 METHODS
For this landscape analysis, the USAID funded
Health Policy Plus team interviewed representatives
from 128 private sector entities, including banks,
private equity firms, private hospitals, midwives,
startup incubators, and transportation and consumer
goods firms in the provinces of Jakarta, West Java,
Central Java, East Java, North Sumatera, Maluku,
North Maluku, Papua and West Papua. The
assessment focused on key health system drivers that
affect access to, and the quality of, maternal and
newborn health services; it then identified
opportunities for private intervention.
3 RESULT AND DISCUSSION
The growing space in the health sector offers
opportunities for investment from many sectors.
Greater financial access to health services will
increase the number of patients seeking care from
health facilities and offers the prospect of expanding
infrastructure. In addition to guaranteed health
services under JKN, a multitude of support services
will be needed for public and private providers. This
will offer opportunities for innovation from start-up
companies, technology companies, and others
looking to enter the market. The entry points are
manifold depending on the level of innovation that a
company can bring to the table and what issues
within the system that they want to improve.
The health market in Indonesia is considered
highly regulated by the government and technical
complex, making it a risky—or higher-cost—space
for entry in which funding from development
finance institutions, or governments can help to
lower risk and catalyse investment. The team
identified five themes that provide concrete
examples that could be exciting from a profit
standpoint, while also offering real solutions to
Indonesia’s high maternal and newborn mortality
ratios.
3.1 Scale Successful Private Facilities to
Improve Access
Indonesia’s 70 million women of reproductive age
are increasingly looking to private providers for
reproductive health services (United Nations
Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2015).
Only 36 percent of deliveries took place in a private
facility in 2007, but this number had risen to 46
percent by 2012, well surpassing the 18 percent who
deliver at a public facility. As the number of women
accessing health services increases—particularly due
to JKN financial coverage—there is increased
demand for high-quality facilities that are
geographically accessible. This opportunity presents
itself in two ways:
1. Invest in high-quality midwife clinics. 75
percent of Indonesian women receive antenatal
care at midwifery clinics and 62 percent give
birth with a midwife (Statistics Indonesia,
2013). A number of midwives were interested in
Moving the Needle for Private Sector Engagement in MNH in Indonesia
21
opening new clinics, expanding existing clinics,
or simply investing in improved infrastructure
and increased quality for their existing clinics.
Investing in these midwives’ success holds the
potential for both profit and improved health
outcomes. However, many loan products on the
market are currently seen as unfavourable.
2. Expand the scope and reach of established
health service companies. Siloam is the largest
private hospital chain in Indonesia and is
currently working to roll out an “Express”
model. This model is intended to function as a
primary satellite facility that people can access
to receive basic care or seek a referral to a
Siloam hospital. “Express” clinics—which have
cost structures that differ from Siloam parent
hospitals—can function profitably at BPJS
reimbursement rates given high use, while also
increasing brand recognition. There is plenty of
opportunity for other hospitals to establish
similar satellite models, or for a new company
interested in franchising clinics or moving
access outside of urban centres to partner with
hospitals for referral purposes.
3.2 Technology Solutions to Improve
Communication for Service Delivery
Technology solutions to improve communication for
service delivery are potentials for Indonesia rapid
growing in internet and mobile phone access. Only
40 percent of the population is currently online and
just 15 percent of mobile users use smart phones,
projections show that 133.5 million people will be
online by 2019. Much of the incubated start-up
culture in Indonesia is centred on technology and its
application to Indonesian needs. Increasingly, tech
deals are included in Indonesian investors’ portfolios
(Freischlad, 2015). Technology can be focused and
used in important ways to help decrease maternal
and newborn mortality rates:
1. Increase access to information and improve
knowledge sharing for e.g. online training
classes could play an important future role in
Indonesian health. Leveraging phone and
internet platforms to improve knowledge and
foster communication between providers and
referral systems will also be extremely
important. On the other side of the service, the
provision of key health information to patients
about risky behaviours, disease symptoms, or
their rights under JKN is also needed.
2. Expand the reach of providers through
applications that allow patients to communicate
with doctors, even when they cannot travel to a
clinic, could be an additional solution.
Klikdokter, Alodokter and TanyaDokter are
some of the models though none have a large
market share yet.
3. Improve the collection and distribution of
available data, from the current government of
Indonesia, and private sector actors about the
characteristics of the 70 million women of
reproductive age in Indonesia, could be
effectively aggregated into a rich database. New
technology introduced to the health sector in the
future can help collect data in a more systematic
way and offer a better sense of the gaps that
must be filled.
3.3 Transportation Solutions
Transportation solutions could fill gaps of limited
public service transportation in many areas,
addressing current serious barrier to access care.
Road conditions often prevent women from
attending check-ups at their local clinic; at other
times, ambulances are not procured by local
facilities for emergency situations. Furthermore,
there is no national emergency dispatch service in
Indonesia. With the growing culture of ride-share
applications in Indonesia, there is an opening to use
existing networks to provide scheduled and
emergency transportation.
Midwives have noted the growing demand for
transportation services by women who prefer to pre-
schedule transport for upcoming deliveries rather
than procuring a ride in the moment of need, but
there is also a need for emergency transportation.
Leveraging the spread of mobile infrastructure, a
business operating an innovative technology
platform to connect local resources could increase
access to health services, and could save the lives of
women in emergency obstetric situations.
3.4 Improve Quality of Midwifery Care
Through Private Sector Training
Institutions
At present, demand for midwifery training is high
and schools are saturated with students.
Additionally, midwives must be relicensed every
five years, a process that involves continuing
education. Major opportunities in this area include
the following:
1. Expand education institutions outside of the
urban market into peri-urban areas. Most
midwives are educated through private
INAHEA 2017 - 4th Annual Meeting of the Indonesian Health Economics Association
22
institutions, most of which are located in urban
areas. Only graduates from schools rated A or B
under national system are hired by the civil
service to work in public facilities. This has led
to a saturation of A and B schools in urban
areas. The private institutions take in as many
students as they can for the sake of profits,
which may compromise teaching quality, and
students often graduate without ever performing
a delivery because not enough deliveries
occurred to accommodate each student. The
shift of private institutions out of urban areas
will move students to a wider area, increase
access to smaller classes, and offer greater
opportunities for hands-on study.
2. Grow access points for continued medical
education. Midwives require 25 credits of
continuing medical education to renew their
license every five years. These credits can be
achieved through a number of avenues,
including writing journal articles or attending
seminars. The study team’s interviews found
that a number of midwives are very interested in
attending continuing education seminars on
topics like infection prevention, but that these
courses are sporadically delivered and not
readily accessible, making it costly to attend.
These problems offer two solution areas. First,
private training institutions can leverage their
network of trainers across the country to offer
consistently high-demand courses through a
low-cost, high-volume model. Second,
financiers investing in the expansion of private
hospitals and clinics into peri-urban and rural
areas could also invest in developing e-learning
courses to ensure that staff can maintain their
skills and knowledge. The courses could be
made available for a fee to providers outside of
their network to generate revenue. In many
areas, the growth of internet access is also
providing this opportunity for the first time.
3.5 Tailor Financial Products for
Maternal and Newborn Health
Tailor financial products for maternal and newborn
health could expand the reach of Indonesia’s
banking system to currently only 21.9 percent of the
poorest two quintiles (poorest 40%) of the
population holds savings in a financial institution.
The study team suggests banks to increase their
market share while helping mother and newborn
care:
1. Offer specialized loans for healthcare providers.
Microfinance institutions could provide capital
for successful private midwives hoping to scale
their businesses. Specialized loans for
midwives, with a consistent stream of patients,
could be quite profitable, as midwives have
historically been preferred providers for
reproductive health services. Additional benefits
to the loan product (like managerial technical
assistance) could entice more businesses to take
out loans.
2. Introduce banking products tailored to
improving access to healthcare for women.
Although BPJS reimburses medical costs,
women often endure significant transportation
costs or lost income associated with maternity
leave. Maternity savings accounts can bring
women into banking and help them save for
costs associated with pregnancy that are not
reimbursed by BPJS. Loyalty incentives such as
free ultrasounds, check-ups, etc. for banking
clients could entice more women to open
accounts, while also improving the quality of
antenatal clinic visits.
3. Offer supplemental insurance for maternal
health. Private health insurance companies can
offer private insurance packages that bundle
services associated with maternal and newborn
health costs filling the gaps of JKN
reimbursement and pulling more clients into the
market.
4 CONCLUSIONS
As JKN is rolled out, Indonesia’s health system will
grow, demand for services will increase, and more
money will flow into the health sector. These
changes provide an opportunity for actors outside of
government to get involved in improving access to,
and quality of, maternal and newborn health
services. There are many opportunities for the
private sector to finance and develop new or
growing ideas. These opportunities hold the promise
of profit and market expansion, but also the potential
to save lives and lower maternal and newborn
mortality ratios.
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