The Iranian Health Insurance System; Past Experiences, Present Challenges And Future Strategies

Background: The Iranian healthcare system is primarily an insurance based system. This structure has an important influence on the efficiency and equity of the provision of healthcare in Iran. This paper reviews the history of the Iranian healthcare system and the impact of the Iranian health insurance system on healthcare performance based on the results of interviews with key opinion leaders and empirical evidence. Methods: This review uses mixed methods: a systematic literature review of electronic databases supplemented by hand searching of books and journals including Government publications and other grey literature. The issues identified were explored through a series of semi-structured interviews with key informants from within the Iranian healthcare system. The interviews were recorded transcribed, coded, classified, and analysed thematically. Empirical evidence was also sought to support or contradict the views expressed in the interviews. Results: Sixteen interviews with key informants were conducted and presented anonymously. The interviewees raised many issues which were summarised into five main issues: increasing health expenditures, lack of systematic health technology assessment, very limited financial resources, challenging management and regulation, and uncovered population. Conclusion: A wide range of issues have affected the efficiency, quality and equity of the services provided by the Iranian healthcare system. The initial and most important step toward improving the efficiency, equity and quality of the health insurance system is to focus on evidence-based policy making to generate feasible, reasonable and comprehensive reforms.

[1]  A. Haycox,et al.  Health Care Financing In Iran; Is Privatization A Good Solution? , 2012, Iranian Journal of Public Health.

[2]  A. Haycox,et al.  Pharmaceutical policy and market in Iran: past experiences and future challenges , 2011 .

[3]  C. Tishelman,et al.  "We noticed that suddenly the country has become full of MRI". Policy makers' views on diffusion and use of health technologies in Iran , 2010, Health research policy and systems.

[4]  Ryan T. Moore,et al.  Public policy for the poor? A randomised assessment of the Mexican universal health insurance programme , 2009, The Lancet.

[5]  Wen-Yi Chen,et al.  The new co-payment policy under Taiwan’s National Health Insurance: welfare gain or welfare loss? , 2008, Expert review of pharmacoeconomics & outcomes research.

[6]  S. Russell,et al.  A difficult balancing act: policy actors' perspectives on using economic evaluation to inform health-care coverage decisions under the Universal Health Insurance Coverage scheme in Thailand. , 2008, Value in health : the journal of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research.

[7]  Juan Eugenio Hernandez Avila,et al.  A Politically Robust Experimental Design for Public Policy Evaluation, With Application to the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program , 2007, Journal of policy analysis and management : [the journal of the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management].

[8]  P. M. Jonsson,et al.  Diffusion of magnetic resonance imaging in Iran , 2007, International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care.

[9]  P. Chisnall Qualitative Interviewing: The Art of Hearing Data , 1996 .

[10]  H. Rubin,et al.  Qualitative Interviewing: The Art of Hearing Data , 1995 .

[11]  Michael M. Davis,et al.  National health insurance. , 1949, Scientific American.

[12]  C. Prigmore Social work in Iran since the white revolution , 1976 .