Rising Medical Costs and the Need for Sustainable Solutions

The escalating cost of healthcare in Malaysia has become a pressing concern. With private hospitals increasing charges and insurance premiums rising in tandem, many Malaysians find themselves priced out of private care. This growing financial burden is forcing more people to turn to public hospitals, placing unprecedented pressure on a system already operating at capacity.

The relationship between rising medical charges, soaring insurance premiums, and the strain on public hospitals creates a cycle that is difficult to break. When private hospitals raise their prices, insurers adjust premiums to cover these costs. Patients, especially those in the middle-income group, then face a difficult choice: pay higher premiums or rely on public hospitals for affordable care. This shift burdens public healthcare facilities, which are designed primarily to serve underserved populations. Public hospitals, stretched thin on resources, struggle to maintain quality while catering to increasing demand. This dynamic reflects a growing imbalance in our healthcare system.

Healthcare Is Not a Commodity

Healthcare is unlike commodities that people can shop around for. In emergencies or critical situations, decisions are driven by trust, urgency, and necessity rather than cost. Transparency in pricing is a step toward resolving this challenge but cannot be a standalone solution. Displaying prices for procedures, treatments, and medications may empower patients and encourage competition, but this approach does not address deeper systemic issues such as resource allocation, billing complexity, and price inflation.

The Role of DRG and Case-Mix in Healthcare Reform

To tackle rising healthcare costs, structured reforms such as Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRG) and case-mix systems offer practical solutions. DRG classifies patients with similar medical conditions and treatment needs into categories, each assigned a fixed payment amount. This system removes incentives to overcharge for services and encourages hospitals to manage their resources efficiently. Hospitals providing care within the payment limits retain the savings, while those exceeding the allocated amount absorb the costs. This model promotes resource optimisation and cost control.

Case-mix systems complement DRG by measuring hospital performance more broadly. These systems consider the diversity and complexity of cases treated, ensuring that hospitals managing severe or resource-intensive conditions receive adequate funding. For example, a hospital specialising in complex treatments like cancer care naturally requires more resources than one handling routine procedures. Case-mix indices ensure funding reflects the actual care provided and avoid penalising hospitals that manage high-complexity cases.

Indonesia’s experience with its case-mix system, INA-CBGs (Indonesia Case-Based Groups), introduced in 2014, offers valuable insights. As part of its Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN) programme, INA-CBGs standardised payments for healthcare services by grouping cases based on clinical characteristics and resource needs. Widely adopted across public and private hospitals under the Health Social Security Agency (BPJS Kesehatan), INA-CBGs have been instrumental in achieving universal health coverage. Despite initial challenges such as inadequate data quality and documentation, the system has proven effective in managing costs and allocating resources efficiently. This example demonstrates the importance of robust data infrastructure and ongoing refinement in implementing such reforms.

In Malaysia, case-mix systems have been piloted in public hospitals with promising results. Expanding these systems to private hospitals and integrating them with DRG could create a balanced payment structure, rewarding hospitals that provide efficient, high-quality care. By learning from Indonesia and other global examples, Malaysia can adapt these systems to its unique healthcare landscape.

The Importance of Prevention

Prevention is one of the most effective yet underutilised strategies for addressing rising healthcare costs. By focusing on preventing diseases before they occur, the overall demand for expensive medical treatments can be significantly reduced. National campaigns promoting healthy lifestyles, regular health screenings, and vaccinations play a vital role in achieving this goal. Public health professionals are pivotal in designing and implementing these initiatives, encouraging individuals to adopt healthier habits and take proactive steps toward better health.

Incentives for prevention can also be integrated into the healthcare system. Insurers, for instance, could offer lower premiums to individuals who meet health benchmarks or undergo regular screenings. Primary care services could also incorporate preventive care as a routine feature, ensuring timely interventions and reducing the likelihood of costly hospitalisations.

Improving Public Healthcare Capacity

As more Malaysians turn to public hospitals for affordable care, it is critical to enhance the capacity of these institutions. Expanding hospital facilities, increasing the healthcare workforce, and upgrading medical equipment are essential steps. Community health clinics can also play a significant role in alleviating the burden on hospitals by managing non-critical cases and providing basic care closer to where people live.

Digital health solutions such as telemedicine and electronic health records further improve efficiency and accessibility. Telemedicine enables patients to consult doctors remotely, while electronic records ensure better coordination of care, reducing duplication of tests and unnecessary procedures.

Exploring Public Healthcare Financing

Sustainable financing is essential for ensuring universal health coverage. Malaysia could consider expanding existing schemes such as MySalam to cover a broader range of services and conditions, providing financial protection to more citizens. Introducing mandatory health insurance contributions, similar to systems in countries like Germany, could help pool resources and distribute costs more equitably.

Public-private partnerships may also play a role in financing healthcare. Subsidising certain treatments in private hospitals could reduce the burden on public facilities while ensuring patients receive timely care. Any reform in public healthcare financing must balance affordability with access and quality.

A Call for Collective Action

Rising healthcare costs are not just an economic issue but a public health challenge. They disproportionately affect vulnerable populations and delay access to essential care. Public health professionals have a critical role in advocating for equitable reforms, educating the public on preventive care, and collaborating with policymakers to design sustainable solutions. Ensuring cost-control measures maintain a balance between affordability and quality is essential for a healthcare system that serves everyone effectively.

The time to act is now. Structured reforms like DRG and case-mix, alongside transparency, preventive care initiatives, improved public healthcare capacity, and sustainable financing, offer a viable path to a fairer and more efficient healthcare system. By fostering collaboration between stakeholders, Malaysia can ensure healthcare remains a fundamental right for all and not an unattainable privilege for the few.