Healthcare in Indonesia

Government expenditure on healthcare in Indonesia is about 3.1 percent of its total gross domestic product.[1]

Newly certified midwives in South Sulawesi, Indonesia

Healthcare provision

According to data from the Ministry of Health of Indonesia there are 2454 hospitals around the country, with a total of 305,242 beds - a very low figure of 0.9 bed per 100,000 inhabitants. Most hospitals are in urban areas.[2][3] Among these 882 of these hospitals are government owned and 1509 are private hospitals. According to the Worldbank data in 2012, there are 0.2 physicians per 1,000 people, with 1.2 Nurses and Midwives per 1,000 people in Indonesia.[3] Out of all the 2454 hospitals in Indonesia, 20 have been accredited by Joint Commission international (JCI) as of 2015.[4] In addition there are 9718 government financed Puskesmas (Health Community Centre) listed by the Ministry of Health of Indonesia, which provide comprehensive healthcare and vaccination for the population in the sub-district level. Both traditional and modern health practices are employed.

Indonesia's community health system are organised in three tiers, on top of the chart is Community Health Centre (Puskesmas), followed by Health Sub-Centres on the second level and Village-Level Integrated Posts at the third level.[5]

Universal Health Coverage

In 2010 an estimated 56 percent of Indonesians, mainly state employees, low-income earners and those with private coverage had some form of health insurance. The rate is expected to reach 100 percent by 2019, following the implementation of a system of universal social health insurance coverage that was launched in 2014. The aim is to grant free services for all hospitalisations in basic (class-3 hospital beds).[6]

Healthcare provision in Indonesia has traditionally been fragmented, with private insurance provision for those able to pay for it alongside basic public coverage for the poorest in society and NGOs working in specialised areas providing services to those not covered by public or private schemes. In January 2014, the Indonesian government launched Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN), a scheme to implement universal health care in Indonesia. It is expected that spending on healthcare will increase by 12% a year and reach US$46 billion a year by 2019.[7] Under JKN, all Indonesians will receive coverage for a range of treatments via health services from public providers as well as those private organisations that have opted to join the scheme. The formally employed pay a premium worth five percent of their salary, with one percent being paid by the employee and four percent being paid by their employer. Informal workers and the self-employed pay a fixed monthly premium of between 25,500 and 59,500 IDR (£1.34-£3.12). However the scheme has been criticised for being over-ambitious, a lack of competency in administration and a failure to address the need for improving healthcare infrastructure in remote areas. An official for the programme's administering organisation, the social security agency Badan Penyelenggara Jaminan Sosial Kesehatan, has stated that JKN exceeded its target for enrolling members in its first year (registering 133.4 million members compared to a target of 121.6 million) and that according to an independent survey the customer satisfaction rate was 81 percent, awareness of JKN was 95 percent, and that complaints had been resolved within one and a half days on average. JKN is expected to be implemented in stages. When the initial stages came into effect in January 2014, 48% of the country's population became covered. It is expected that the entire population will be covered in 2019.[8][9]

The Siloam Hospitals Group, which operates 20 hospitals in the country is planning to provide facilities for JKN patients in the same premises as its private provision. It plans to build 40 more hospitals by 2017.[10]

Mental Health

Eleven percent of the country’s population suffers from mental disorders,[11] with over 19 million of the people of age 15 or older.[12] The neuropsychiatric disorders in Indonesia are estimated to contribute to 10.7% of global burden disease.[13] There are definitely gaps in the mental health department that cannot be overlooked, with many of them are representative of the mental health gaps in Southeast Asia as a whole. The mental health policy in Indonesia was most recently revised in 2001. Since then, the nation has gone through enormous changes in all aspects as a country. Indonesia’s economy has been steadily growing in the past decade. Health wise, Indonesia has suffered numerous H5N1 outbreaks, with the highest number of recorded human cases of this virus in the world.[14] The nation was severely affected by the tsunami tragedy in 2004. There are still many factors that have altered Indonesians’ lives, ultimately affecting the mental health status of the people greatly since 2001, calling for a more updated mental health policy.

There is very little amount of funding dedicated to mental health. The total health expenditure is 2.36%, and less than 1% of that goes towards mental health.[13] Indonesia’s mental health legislation has the same issues mentioned above that Southeast Asia faces as a region. The legislation is far from what can be considered complete and fair, and the articles included are not well practised and reinforced. In 1966, Indonesia was well ahead of other countries in the region by having a mental health law separated from general health laws, providing potentials for expansion of the mental health system. However, the law was repealed in 1993 and integrated into general health laws.[15] Mental health now only occupies four articles in the current health law.[16] The articles are too general, causing difficulties to apply and implement. Article 26 states that almost anybody can request treatment and hospitalisation for persons with mental disorder, yet has no mention of the persons’ consent. By doing so, Article 26 creates an impression that mentally ill individuals are generally considered dangerous to the community because they need to be forced into treatment.[16] This goes along with the negative stigmas associated with mental disorders mentioned above and elaborated later in this paper. Also, Article 27 states that the government will provide a presidential decree for regulations and management of mental health, yet nothing has been done.[16]

There are also issues with accessibility and quality of mental health care. Official in-service training on training is not widely provided to the primary care professionals. WHO (2011) reports that between 2006 and 2011, the majority of primary care doctors and nurses have not received such training. There is also only one mental health hospital per five million people and one psychiatrist working in the mental health sector in ten million people.[13] In addition to the unbalanced number of psychiatrists among population, the psychiatrists are also not well distributed in the country. Up until 2011, there is no psychiatrists in the rural area of Indonesia, while half of them are concentrated in the capital city, Jakarta, and the rest in the old capital city, Yogyakarta, and the second largest city, Surabaya.[17] This creates a great barrier for mental health patients seeking official help.

See also Health in Indonesia

References

  1. WHO Indonesia
  2. RI Health Department Official Site
  3. 1 2 Worldbank
  4. JCI Indonesia
  5. http://countrystudies.us/indonesia/57.htm
  6. http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/05/02/analysis-indonesia-the-health-nation.html
  7. Britnell, Mark (2015). In Search of the Perfect Health System. London: Palgrave. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-137-49661-4.
  8. Razavi, Lauren (15 May 2015). "Indonesia's universal health scheme: one year on, what's the verdict?". theguardian.com. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  9. http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2014/0310/Indonesia-launches-world-s-largest-health-insurance-system
  10. Britnell, Mark (2015). In Search of the Perfect Health System. London: Palgrave. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-137-49661-4.
  11. Vitelli, Romeo (2011). “Fighting Pasung in Indonesia’s Mentally Ill”. The Huffington Post. Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/romeo-vitelli/indonesia-pasung_b_913585.html on 28 March 2014
  12. Faizal, E. B. (2012). “Mentally Ill Often Taken to Traditional Practitioners”. The Jakarta Post. Retrieved from http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/02/13/mentally-ill-often-taken-traditional-practitioners.html on 4 March 2014
  13. 1 2 3 WHO Mental Health Atlas (2011). “Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse”. World Health Organization
  14. Adisasmito, W. et al (2013). “Human Influenza A H5N1 in Indonesia: Health Care Service-Associated Delays in Treatment Initiation.” BMC Public Health, 13, 571. Doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-571
  15. Pols, H. (2006). “The Development of Psychiatry in Indonesia: From Colonial to Modern Times”. International Review of Psychiatry, 18(4), 363-370
  16. 1 2 3 Irmansyah, I., Prasetyo, Y.A. & Minas, H. (2009). “Human Rights of Persons with Mental Illness in Indonesia: More than Legislation is Needed.” International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 3, 14. Doi: 10.1186/1752-4458-3-14
  17. Dipa, Arya (2011). “Indonesia Lacks Psychiatrists”. The Jakarta Post. Retrieved from http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/09/10/indonesia-lacks-psychiatrists.html on 9 March 2014
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