-
Advertisement
Hong Kong society
OpinionLetters

Letters | Hong Kong’s rush into raising healthcare charges is a mistake

Readers discuss the three steps the government should take before raising fees, district councillors’ engagement in meetings, and the merits of a courtesy campaign

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
People make payment at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Hong Kong’s Jordan district on March 25. Photo: Jelly Tse
Letters
Feel strongly about these letters, or any other aspects of the news? Share your views by emailing us your Letter to the Editor at [email protected] or filling in this Google form. Submissions should not exceed 400 words, and must include your full name and address, plus a phone number for verification
Hong Kong’s public healthcare system was built on a promise: no one should be bankrupted by illness. With the government eyeing substantial fee increases for emergency and diagnostic services, we’re left wondering if officials have thought this through. Against a backdrop of an ageing population, younger individuals developing chronic conditions and spiralling medical costs, the proposal is poorly timed. Raising fees without a comprehensive financing plan is like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic – it misses the iceberg entirely.
The current system, where the government foots 97 per cent of public healthcare costs, has papered over three glaring structural problems. First, we’re facing a severe public-private resource imbalance. Private hospitals enjoy tax breaks and discounted land grants while charging fees that make most citizens recoil. When emergency services costing HK$2,400 (US$310) are priced at just HK$180, is it any surprise patients with minor sniffles flock to public facilities?
Advertisement
Second, the voluntary insurance scheme has turned out to be a damp squib. Without provisions for high-risk pooling or guaranteed acceptance, chronic patients and vulnerable groups have been left high and dry. Third, primary care – the frontline defence that could take pressure off hospitals – remains woefully underdeveloped.

Without tackling these issues head-on, fee increases will hit vulnerable groups hard. Middle-class families already struggle with expenses for cancer medications that cost up to HK$20,000 per month. Working-class residents might delay treatment until their condition worsens, while chronic patients might skip vital check-ups altogether.

Advertisement

The government should implement three substantial solutions instead of rushing towards fee increases.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x