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Kazakhstan - P4H Network
Current Health Expenditure (CHE) as % Gross Domestic Product (GDP)3.9%CHE/GDP
Out-of-pocket (OOPS) as % of Current Health Expenditure (CHE)25%OOP/CHE
Domestic General Government Health Expenditure (GGHE-D) as % General Government Expenditure (GGE)11.6%GGHE-D/GGE
Gross Domestic Product (GDP), in constant (2020) US$ per capita197.1KGDP (USD)
Population (in thousands)19.2MPopulation
Incidence of Catastrophic Health Spending at 10% Threshold (SDG 3.8.2) Total3.7%Catastrophic Health Spending

Nationwide mandatory social health insurance established in Kazakhstan

Before the introduction of mandatory social health insurance (MSHI) in 2020, Kazakhstan operated a budget-financed health care model with a state guaranteed benefit package free for all residents. Between 2000 and 2018, the total health expenditure per capita increased substantially from US$ 50 to US$ 273, but the growth of health expenditure has been average relative to other Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries. Kazakhstan demonstrated relative success among the countries of the CIS in ensuring that public sources prevailed in health care financing. Since 2000, the share of the government health expenditure in total health expenditure in Kazakhstan was one of the highest in the CIS, and the share of out-of-pocket payments was one of the lowest at 33.5% in 2018 .

Since 2010, a range of important health system reforms have been implemented, including enhancing the autonomy of health care service providers, improving regulation of health service procurement, strengthening primary health care (PHC), introducing corporate governance principles in the public sector, and active digitalization with improved interoperability among health system databases. A social health insurance fund was established in 2016 as the single payer. Reforms in other sectors, such as labor and social protection, helped to prepare for the MHSI reform. A bundled payment by the informally employed was introduced to simplify participation in health insurance, social protection, pension, and income tax systems. MSHI  was piloted in 2019 in the Karaganda region and launched nationwide in 2020. 

Mandatory health insurance and a guaranteed benefit package

A large share of Kazakhstan’s population — 58% –  is exempt from mandatory contributions to the MSHI fund, and the state makes payments on behalf of the individuals in this group. The introduction of MSHI  has already substantially improved the availability of financial resources for health care funding, which were estimated to have increased by 112%  in 2020 compared to 2019. 

The state guarantees access to a universal package of benefits that does not depend on contribution amount and covers a broad range of services. PHC, free medicines, specialized outpatient care, and acute inpatient care are available to all citizens and registered foreigners. The second package, called the insurance benefits, covers elective care, certain diagnostic procedures, medicines, medical rehabilitation, high-cost treatments, and elective dental care for children and pregnant women. This package is offered to insureds, who comprise 84%  of the population. The health system continues to provide social health protection for all vulnerable groups and the majority of the population.