Abstract

Thailand achieved Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in 2002 through three main public health insurance schemes; the tax-financed Civil Servant Medical Benefit Scheme (CSMBS) covers public sector employees and dependants (7.1% of total population), payroll-tax financed Social Health Insurance (SHI) Scheme covers private sector employees (17.2%), and the tax-financed Universal Coverage Scheme (UCS) covers the remaining majority (75.7%) [1,2]. Registered migrant workers are covered by the SHI while voluntary premium-contribution migrant health insurance, managed by Ministry of Public Health (MOPH), covers undocumented migrants and their dependants. Hence, many unregistered migrant workers and their family members are not covered by any financial risk protection systems; services are paid for out-of-pocket [3]. Extensive geographical coverage of district health systems facilitates adequate and equitable access [4] with low levels of unmet needs [5]. The comprehensive benefit package [2] and free-at-point of services result in low and continually decreasing prevalence of catastrophic health spending [6] (6.7% in 1994 to 2.2% in 2017 [7]) and incidence of impoverishment (1.4% in 1996 to 0.4% in 2015 (using international poverty line of US$ 3.1 per capita per day)) [8]. This perspective analyses how Thailand has responded to the COVID-19 pandemic through the UHC lens, covering all Thai and non-Thai populations, including migrant workers, with a comprehensive set of COVID-19-related services for everyone--a key contributing factor to pandemic containment.

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