Indonesian Journal of Health Science
Vol 6 No 2 (2026)

The demographic bonus and shifting health insurance risk profiles among the productive age population in Indonesia: A literature review

Assyifa Ramadhani (Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta)
Reynanda Sabrina (Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta)
Robby Firmansyah (Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta)
Riswandy Wasir (Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta)



Article Info

Publish Date
06 Jun 2026

Abstract

Background: Indonesia is currently experiencing a demographic bonus, with the productive age population accounting for 69.3% of the total population. While this presents an economic opportunity, it poses significant challenges to the health sector due to an epidemiological transition toward Non Communicable Diseases (NCDs), which contribute to 74% of global mortality. Objective: This study aims to analyze the impact of the demographic bonus on the shifting health risk profiles of the productive age group and its implications for claim trends and the sustainability of the health insurance system in Indonesia. Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted using the Google Scholar database. The search strategy employed keywords related to demographics, NCDs, and health financing, with a publication filter for the last ten years (2016–2026). Data were analyzed using a descriptive narrative approach to synthesize relevant findings. Results: The findings indicate that the dominance of the productive age population, coupled with unhealthy lifestyle behaviors, has triggered a rise in chronic disease prevalence requiring long term medical management. This shift directly correlates with a surge in healthcare service utilization and claim burdens within the National Health Insurance (JKN) scheme. However, current insurance benefit designs remain heavily focused on curative services (85.4%), while promotive preventive efforts at primary care facilities remain suboptimal. The imbalance between increased utilization and financing capacity potentially threatens risk pool stability and risks financial deficits. Conclusion: The demographic bonus may become an economic burden without an adaptive health system transformation. Strengthening promotive preventive policies and innovative chronic disease management are essential to control medical costs. Cross sector synergy is crucial to ensure a healthy productive age population and the long term sustainability of the JKN program.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ijhs

Publisher

Subject

Dentistry Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology Nursing Public Health Veterinary

Description

Indonesian Journal of Health Science is a place for disseminating research results in the field of health, including, but not limited to topics of public health, environmental health, occupational health, pharmacy, nutrition, epidemiology, medical laboratories, physiotherapy, or other general ...