1st Edition

Health Insurance Reforms in Asia

By Sabrina Ching Yuen Luk Copyright 2014
    202 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    216 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book empirically examines health care financing reforms and popular responses in three major cities in East Asia: Shanghai, Singapore, and Hong Kong. It adopts a new revised version of the theory of historical institutionalism to compare and explain the divergent reform paths in these three places over the past three decades. It also examines forces that propel institutional change.

    The book provides three detailed case studies on the development of health care financing reforms and the politics of implementing them. It shows that health care systems in Shanghai, Singapore, and Hong Kong were the products of Western presence in the nineteenth century. It illustrates how greater attention is paid to the roles played by ideas, actors, and environmental triggers without abandoning the core assumptions that political institutions and policy feedback remain central to impact health care financing reforms. It shows that health care financing reform is shaped by a complex interplay of forces over time. It also provides the most updated material about health care financing reforms in Shanghai, Singapore, and Hong Kong. The central argument of this book is that health care financing reform is both an evolving process responding to changing circumstances and a political process revealing an intricate interplay of power relationships and diverse interests. It shows that institutional changes in health care financing system can be incremental but transformative in nature. It argues that social policies will continue to develop and welfare states will continue to adapt and evolve in order to cope with new risks and needs.

    This book sheds new lights on understanding the politics of health care financing reform and sources and modes of institutional change. 

    1. Analyzing Health Care Financing Reform: A Refined Theory of Historical Institutionalism  2. Debating Health Care Reform  3. Shanghai: The Creation of Foreign Settlements and the Introduction of Novel Ideas about Health and Hygiene  4. Contemporary Shanghai: The Dynamics of Health Insurance Reform  5. Singapore: Building Health Care in a Colonial Settlement  6. Contemporary Singapore: Managing Health Care Finance  7. Hong Kong: Western Ideas in a Chinese City  8. Contemporary Hong Kong: Ongoing Debates about Health Care Finance  9. The Way Forward

    Biography

    Sabrina Luk is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Management and Economics, Kunming University of Science and Technology. She was awarded her PhD from the Department of Political Science and International Studies, University of Birmingham, and her MPhil and Bachelor of Social Science (First Class Honours) from the Department of Government and Public Administration, the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She was the winner of the 2012 Michael O’Rourke PhD Publication Award at the University of Birmingham for her research contributions and publication record. She is also the Highly Commended Award winner of the 2013 Emerald/EFMD Outstanding Doctoral Research Awards in the Healthcare Management category.