Abstract

BackgroundThe zero-markup drug policy (also known as the universal zero-markup drug policy (UZMDP)) was implemented in stages beginning with primary healthcare facilities in 2009 and eventually encompassing city public hospitals in 2016. This policy has been a central pillar of Chinese health reforms. While the literature has examined the impacts of this policy on healthcare utilization and expenditures, a more comprehensive and detailed assessment is warranted. The purpose of this paper is to explore the impacts of the UZMDP on inpatient and outpatient visits as well as on both aggregate healthcare expenditures and its various components (including drug, diagnosis, laboratory, and medical consumables expenditures).MethodsA pre-post design was applied to a dataset extracted from the Changde Municipal Human Resource and Social Security Bureau comprising discharge data on 27,246 inpatients and encounter data on 48,282 outpatients in Changde city, Hunan province, China. The pre-UZMDP period for the city public hospitals was defined as the period from October 2015 to September 2016, while the post-UZMDP period was defined as the period from October 2016 to September 2017. Difference-in-Difference negative binomial and Tobit regression models were employed to evaluate the impacts of the UZMDP on healthcare utilization and expenditures, respectively.ResultsFour key findings flow from our assessment of the impacts of the UZMDP: first, outpatient and inpatient visits increased by 8.89 % and 9.39 %, respectively; second, average annual inpatient and outpatient drug expenditures fell by 4,349.00 CNY and 1,262.00 CNY, respectively; third, average annual expenditures on other categories of healthcare expenditures increased by 2,500.83 CNY, 417.10 CNY, 122.98 CNY, and 143.50 CNY for aggregate inpatient, inpatient diagnosis, inpatient laboratory, and outpatient medical consumables expenditures, respectively; and fourth, men and older individuals tended to have more inpatient and outpatient visits than their counterparts.ConclusionsAlthough the UZMDP was effective in reducing both inpatient and outpatient drug expenditures, it led to a sharp rise in other expenditure categories. Policy decision makers are advised to undertake efforts to contain the growth in total healthcare expenditures, in general, as well as to evaluate the offsetting effects of the policy on non-drug components of care.

Highlights

  • The zero-markup drug policy ( known as the universal zero-markup drug policy (UZMDP)) was implemented in stages beginning with primary healthcare facilities in 2009 and eventually encompassing city public hospitals in 2016

  • The impacts of the Universal zero-markup drug policy (UZMDP) on healthcare expenditures exhibited similar trends in the fixed effects (FE) model as those observed in the DID model

  • Unlike most studies that reported the positive effects of the zero-markup policy implemented in primary healthcare institutions [13, 14, 17,18,19,20] and county public hospitals [21, 22], our study revealed that the UZMDP reduced drug expenditures as expected, it led to a sharp rise in other expenditure categories

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Summary

Introduction

The zero-markup drug policy ( known as the universal zero-markup drug policy (UZMDP)) was implemented in stages beginning with primary healthcare facilities in 2009 and eventually encompassing city public hospitals in 2016. Because the Chinese government was unable to bear such a heavy financial burden from these subsidies, since 1950 it permitted public healthcare facilities to include a 15 % markup over the drug acquisition cost in the prices charged to customers [2,3,4] This markup policy stabilized the finances of public healthcare facilities [2], it offered incentives to healthcare providers to over-prescribe drugs [5,6,7,8] and resulted in a rapid escalation of healthcare expenditures [9]. The zero-markup policy was expanded to include county public hospitals in 2015, and in 2016, the zero-markup policy was applied to all drugs and to city public hospitals [16]

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