Review of Primary Care Practice and Education (Kajian Praktik dan Pendidikan Layanan Primer)
Vol 2, No 3 (2019): September

General Practitioners’ Autonomy in the Management of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) in the JKN Era: Is It Feasible?

Nur Afrainin Syah (Department of Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Andalas University)



Article Info

Publish Date
03 Oct 2019

Abstract

Demographic, epidemiological, and nutritional transitions increase life expectancy, changes in lifestyles and behaviors of Indonesian people. These changes are resulting in a growing contribution of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) to morbidity and mortality, especially metabolic disorders, such as type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM), hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Approximately 10.9% of the Indonesian population above 15 years old suffers from type 2 DM (21.2 million) and 34.1% have hypertension (66.3 million) in 2018. These figures increase significantly from 2013 figure; 6.9% and 25.8% respectively1. The metabolic disorders, which in turn, are responsible for vascular problems such as renal failure, stroke, and heart attack. Not surprisingly, then, 60% of Indonesian national health insurance (JKN) funds are spent on the NCDs. This condition causes a deficit and threatens the sustainability of the JKN program.

Copyrights © 2019






Journal Info

Abbrev

rpcpe

Publisher

Subject

Education Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology Public Health

Description

The Review of Primary Care Practice and Education is a bilingual open access journal which provides scientific information on the field of ‘Primary Care’ and ‘Family Medicine’ in the form of research-based scientific articles, case reports, policy briefs and new findings from experts, ...