People with HIV and AIDS are expecting medical
costs to soar when international health aid is cut off next year, participants
at a policy dialogue said on June 27.
Further
complicating the issue, this demographic has found it difficult to secure
health insurance.
The
dialogue on a health insurance policy for people living with HIV/AIDS was
co-organised by The Vietnam Union of Science and Technology Associations and
the Health Ministry’s Department of HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control.
Health
insurance is expected to be a life preserver for HIV/AIDS patients in Vietnam,
particularly when international aid, which covers almost all medical fees for
HIV-positive patients in the country, will cease next year because Vietnam has
now been categorised as a middle-income country.
Deputy
head of the AIDS Department Hoang Dinh Canh said that when HIV/AIDS patients
pay for health insurance, they would be held accountable to the medical
treatment scheme.
As a result,
they would avoid skipping treatment or shifting to other medical treatment
schemes, which are usually more expensive, he said.
Trinh Thi
Le Tram, director of the Hanoi-based Centre for Law, Healthcare and HIV/AIDS
Policies under the Vietnam Bar Association, said HIV/AIDS patients are usually
poor, unemployed or have unstable incomes.
“They
usually fail to afford health insurance cards, and they need significant
medical care to treat opportunistic infections in addition to their
anti-retroviral (ARV) treatment,” Tram said.
Despite
the fact that under the Law on Health Insurance, poor households were granted
free health insurance cards and near-poor households had to pay only half of
health insurance fees, people with HIV/AIDS still struggled to gain health
insurance coverage.
Do Dang
Dong, a representative from the Vietnam Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS
(VNP+), said that besides administrative difficulties in applying for health
insurance, societal stigma and discrimination were major barriers that
prevented HIV/AIDS carriers from seeking insurance.
Those who
left their hometowns to live in other localities also find it difficult to
obtain insurance because only residents with permanent or temporary
registration can apply for health insurance, he said.
HIV/AIDS
children born overseas to mothers who were trafficked or married foreigners
could not apply for health insurance either because they did not have birth
certificates, he added.
Dong said
that many people with HIV/AIDS also suffer from cancers that require expensive
medicines.
Under a
circular issued by the Health Ministry guiding the revised Law on Health
Insurance, 25 types of expensive medicines used to treat cancer were paid for
by both health insurance agencies and patients, Đông said, adding that it was a
big burden for HIV/AIDS patients.
An
HIV/AIDS carrier in Hanoi’s Gia Lam District said he had to take a medicine
that cost VND1.35 million (US$60.70) daily to prevent the development of cancer
cells.
Previously,
health insurance paid for the medicine in whole, but since 2015 he has paid
half, which created a large financial burden for him and his family, he said.
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