Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons

The Republic of Korea is experiencing a rapidly aging population with increased life expectancy and lowered fertility. National health insurance has provided universal access to health care for all since 1989, and mandatory long-term care insurance (LTCI) was introduced in 2008, in which everybody w...

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Main Authors: Boyoung Jeon, Soonman Kwon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-07-01
Series:Health Systems & Reform
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2017.1345052
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spelling doaj-dcbc9c3805e446dbb53e0d04349de74f2020-11-25T03:02:11ZengTaylor & Francis GroupHealth Systems & Reform2328-86042328-86202017-07-013321422310.1080/23288604.2017.13450521345052Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and LessonsBoyoung Jeon0Soonman Kwon1Faculty of Medicine, University of TsukubaSeoul National UniversityThe Republic of Korea is experiencing a rapidly aging population with increased life expectancy and lowered fertility. National health insurance has provided universal access to health care for all since 1989, and mandatory long-term care insurance (LTCI) was introduced in 2008, in which everybody who contributes to health insurance simultaneously contributes to LTCI. Although health services and long-term care are universally accessible, health differentials remain across socioeconomic groups. LTCI covers about 7% of older people through eligibility assessment and provides benefits for institutional and home-based care and cash benefits in exceptional cases. Long-term care (LTC) benefit eligibility has been criticized for being excessively reliant on physical functionality, and recently eligibility has been extended to people with dementia. Despite the oversupply of LTC providers, quality of care has been a concern and calls for more investment in the quality evaluation system and training of care workers. There continues to be overreliance on inpatient care and unmet health care needs among LTC users as a result of weak gatekeeping by primary care and a lack of effective coordination between health care and LTC.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2017.1345052aginghealth policyhealth systemslong-term care systemsrepublic of korea
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Boyoung Jeon
Soonman Kwon
spellingShingle Boyoung Jeon
Soonman Kwon
Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons
Health Systems & Reform
aging
health policy
health systems
long-term care systems
republic of korea
author_facet Boyoung Jeon
Soonman Kwon
author_sort Boyoung Jeon
title Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons
title_short Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons
title_full Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons
title_fullStr Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons
title_full_unstemmed Health and Long-Term Care Systems for Older People in the Republic of Korea: Policy Challenges and Lessons
title_sort health and long-term care systems for older people in the republic of korea: policy challenges and lessons
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Health Systems & Reform
issn 2328-8604
2328-8620
publishDate 2017-07-01
description The Republic of Korea is experiencing a rapidly aging population with increased life expectancy and lowered fertility. National health insurance has provided universal access to health care for all since 1989, and mandatory long-term care insurance (LTCI) was introduced in 2008, in which everybody who contributes to health insurance simultaneously contributes to LTCI. Although health services and long-term care are universally accessible, health differentials remain across socioeconomic groups. LTCI covers about 7% of older people through eligibility assessment and provides benefits for institutional and home-based care and cash benefits in exceptional cases. Long-term care (LTC) benefit eligibility has been criticized for being excessively reliant on physical functionality, and recently eligibility has been extended to people with dementia. Despite the oversupply of LTC providers, quality of care has been a concern and calls for more investment in the quality evaluation system and training of care workers. There continues to be overreliance on inpatient care and unmet health care needs among LTC users as a result of weak gatekeeping by primary care and a lack of effective coordination between health care and LTC.
topic aging
health policy
health systems
long-term care systems
republic of korea
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2017.1345052
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