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Budgeting based on need: a model to determine sub-national allocation of resources for health services in Indonesia
Authors:Tim Ensor  Hafidz Firdaus  David Dunlop  Alex Manu  Ali Ghufron Mukti  Diah ayu Puspandari  Franz von Roenne  Stephanus Indradjaya  Untung Suseno  Patrick Vaughan
Affiliation:1. Nuffield Centre for International Health and Development, Leeds Institute for Health Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS29LJ, United Kingdom
2. Pusat-KPMAK (Center for Health Financing Policy and Insurance Management), Faculty of medicine, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Gedung Radioputro, Lt 2 Sayap Barat.Jl. Farmako, Sekip Utara, Yogyakarta, 55281, Indonesia
3. Consultant to the Center of Health Economics and Policy Analysis and Lecturer, School of Public Health, University of Indonesia, Depok, 16424, Indonesia
4. Associate Consultant, Oxford Policy Management, 6 St Aldates Courtyard, 38?St Aldates, Oxford, OX1 1BN, United Kingdom
5. Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Jl Farmako, Sekip Utara, Yogyakarta, 55281, Indonesia
6. Diah Ayu Puspandari, Center for Health Financing Policy and Insurance Management (Pusat KP-MAK), Fakultas Kedokteran, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Gedung Radyoputro, Lt 2 Sayap Barat, Jl. Farmako, Sekip Utara, Yogyakarta, 55281, Indonesia
7. Head of the Health Section, Abteilung Bildung, Gesundheit, Soziale Sicherung, Division of Education, Health, Social Protection, Deutsche Gesellschaft f??r Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Postfach 5180, Eschborn, 65726, Germany
8. GIZ Consultant, Pluit Kencana V/9, Jakarta, 14450, Indonesia
9. Senior advisor to the Minister of Health Republic of Indonesia, Jl HR Rasuna Said blok x-5 kav 4-9, Jakarta, 12950, Indonesia
10. Professor Emeritus in Epidemiology and Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and, Associate Consultant to Oxford Policy Management, London, United Kingdom
Abstract:ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Allocating national resources to regions based on need is a key policy issue in most health systems. Many systems utilise proxy measures of need as the basis for allocation formulae. Increasingly these are underpinned by complex statistical methods to separate need from supplier induced utilisation. Assessment of need is then used to allocate existing global budgets to geographic areas. Many low and middle income countries are beginning to use formula methods for funding however these attempts are often hampered by a lack of information on utilisation, relative needs and whether the budgets allocated bear any relationship to cost. An alternative is to develop bottom-up estimates of the cost of providing for local need. This method is viable where public funding is focused on a relatively small number of targeted services. We describe a bottom-up approach to developing a formula for the allocation of resources. The method is illustrated in the context of the state minimum service package mandated to be provided by the Indonesian public health system. METHODS: A standardised costing methodology was developed that is sensitive to the main expected drivers of local cost variation including demographic structure, epidemiology and location. Essential package costing is often undertaken at a country level. It is less usual to utilise the methods across different parts of a country in a way that takes account of variation in population needs and location. Costing was based on best clinical practice in Indonesia and province specific data on distribution and costs of facilities. The resulting model was used to estimate essential package costs in a representative district in each province of the country. FINDINGS: Substantial differences in the costs of providing basic services ranging from USD 15 in urban Yogyakarta to USD 48 in sparsely populated North Maluku. These costs are driven largely by the structure of the population, particularly numbers of births, infants and children and also key diseases with high cost/prevalence and variation, most notably the level of malnutrition. The approach to resource allocation was implemented using existing data sources and permitted the rapid construction of a needs based formula that is highly specific to the package mandated across the country. Refinement could focus more on resources required to finance demand side costs and expansion of the service package to include priority non-communicable services.
Keywords:
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