https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?ref=watch_permalink&v=1069912527173150
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Social Inclusion - RMK-12 : To What Extent is it Prosperous, Inclusive and Sustainable? (19 Nov)
Friday, December 24, 2021
How to read and analyse a Federal Budget and Financial documents (20 Dec)
In this video, I am going to introduce and explain about a few important Federal financial reports in Malaysia, namely Financial Statements, Auditor's General's reports, Federal Budget (Economic Outlook, Fiscal Outlook and Revenue Estimates, Federal Expenditure Estimates). This talk is an update to the Federal Budget workshop series which I had personally conducted since 2018, in English and Mandarin.
No holdbacks: Addressing Health Taboos in Malaysia. (Organised by Charisma Movement) -- Nov 27
Original live video link: https://www.facebook.com/charismamovement/videos/914472686109342
Thursday, December 23, 2021
PHF joint statement: Say 'Yes' to implementation of Medicines Price Regulation Phase 1 (14.12.2021)
Sunday, December 19, 2021
Understanding the amendments to Act 342 (20 Dec 2021)
Amendments to the Prevention and Control of Infectious Diseases Act 1988 (Act 342) have triggered heated reactions within the Dewan Rakyat and also from the public, where netizens and activists have mobilised to oppose the amendments to Act 342. The arguments largely (if not solely) focus on penalties for offences under the Act: (1) the maximum amount of compound fine to be issued to an individual and a corporation; and (2) increasing the maximum fine and jail sentence in a “general penalty” provision.
I would like to share my views after going through all the amendments proposed in the amendment Bill for the first reading in Parliament.
It is important to first consider the objectives and functioning of all the amendments and to understand the existing weaknesses, limitations and gaps of the parent Act 342. This 32-year-old law has had 6 amendments in the past, but all merely to add new infectious diseases to the list in the First Schedule, the latest being Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in June 2020. Now it is time to update some practical and necessary changes to the Act.
To be fair, the proposed amendments to Act 342 are a response to COVID-19 because this still ravaging virus with its various mutations is very much unlike the other 29 diseases on the list. The challenges are massive – it is unprecedented, a disease which has claimed more than 31 thousand lives and infected 2.7 million people in Malaysia. There are numerous complaints or grievances against government officials regarding the handling of the pandemic, namely in terms of testing, tracing, quarantine, surveillance and monitoring of the disease, as well as enforcement of Standard Operating Procedures (SOP). The Ministry of Health (MOH) workforce has been severely strained in terms of performing their duties on all these procedures.
When the Emergency was declared in January, the National Security Council (Majlis Keselamatan Negara, MKN) was the chief decision-making body. Confusion and conflict often arose in public due to many inconsistent policies that were churned out owing to multiple considerations besides public health. These sometimes compromised or undermined the effectiveness of COVID-19 disease prevention and control measures under the jurisdiction of MOH. Now, the emergency period is over, the emergency ordinance has ceased to be in effect, and Act 342 leaves MOH with inherent constraints and uncertainties.
Overall, the nature of the proposed amendments indicates that MOH is seeking to fill the gaps based on the lessons learnt from battling the pandemic over the past 2 years, while preparing for the new challenges ahead. The emergence of the Omicron variant is a stark reminder that COVID-19 is far from being under control. In its present form, Act 342 is insufficient to deal with present and future pandemic-related health threats. The amendments are thus necessary to allow the MOH to act in the current crisis and in other new or emerging public health crises.
At the same time, SOP flouting and non-compliance among certain sections of society (e.g. some individuals, corporations and organisations or groups) has caused many cases, clusters and even deaths. The risks and consequences associated with cases of SOP flouting are well-documented. Without good and effective disease control, the burden of public resources to Find-Test-Trace-Isolate-Support and the unnecessary loss of lives are the sources of public frustration and distrust of government. No Act will be taken seriously if it does not ensure the proportionality of penalties (i.e. right amount of deterrence) on those who do not comply, and if the law is not enforced reasonably, fairly and effectively.
Although the disease severity caused by the Omicron variant is reportedly lower, if the spread of the disease (even among fully vaccinated persons) is not well controlled, the price of negligence will be a surge in devastating new transmission peaks, and rising death numbers, once again adding to the social cost and disruption. The public must do its utmost to safeguard against COVID-19 “fatigue” - extra vigilance is now a key priority.
Let us now look at the amendments. The amendments to Section 2 update the definitions of the responsible officers, replacing ‘health inspector’ with ‘Environmental Health Officer or any suitable person’. This new definition retains local authorities to help in enforcing the Act.
There are two amendments to Section 10(2): First, medical practitioners are required to report any suspected case of infection to the health authority, even if it is not yet confirmed with a laboratory test. This would allow time for the health authority to respond faster with a quarantine order to prevent further spread of a disease. There are, however, concerns that failure to do so could trigger a compound fine.
Secondly, the restrictive reference to ‘the forms (‘borang’) determined by the regulation orders under the Act’ is replaced by ‘whichever form (of document) determined by the Director-General (DG) of Health’. In rapid responses to many new situations where more documents have to be produced for different functions, it makes sense to not have to wait for the Health Minister to gazette new regulations for various forms.
The current Act only recognises ‘quarantine station’ while home quarantine is now an acceptable part of COVID-19 pandemic response. Hence, the addition of a new Section 14A. There are concerns that under Section 14A(2), ‘an officer is given authority to use necessary force (‘kekerasan’) to ensure the (quarantine) order is complied with’. To be fair, this is already in the existing Section 15(2). The government could consider adding another word ‘reasonable’ (‘munasabah’) and give examples in the regulation concerning the new Section 14A(2). While there are documented cases of home quarantine orders being disobeyed thus posing infection risk to the local community, allowing the use of force has to be accompanied with checks.
Next, a new Section 15A is proposed to order confirmed patients, or suspected cases or any (close) contact to wear a tracking device for monitoring purposes. This is an important tool for monitoring the compliance of home quarantine orders, and this was not envisaged 32 years ago when Act 342 was passed.
The new Section 21A (in Part IV of the Act concerning controlling the disease spread) empowers the DG of Health to give any general or specific instruction to any individual or group for preventing the disease spread, and any violation of such instruction is considered an offence. This allows some flexibility for the health authority to give new instructions adapting to changing situations. While there are concerns that this can be abused, however there could also be situations where the DG has to act swiftly and intervene by giving instructions; how does one deal with non-adherence with the instruction order then?
There is a new Part IVA called Enforcement (‘Penguatkuasaan’) which confers the necessary investigation power to the officer enforcing the Act, following Criminal Procedure Code (subsection 21B), as well as requiring people to provide any information relating to disease control and prevention to the officer (subsection 21C). This new Part IVA seeks to empower officers of MOH and others under the Act to contribute to more effective enforcement with relevant and important information to help contain the disease spread.
The new Section 22A creates a new category of offenders: body corporate (pertubuhan perbadanan). The current Act 342 only covers individuals who are responsible, thus there is no legal ground to take action under the Act against a company which consists of many decision makers including directors and managers who should be responsible for the non-compliance of SOP and subsequent consequences. Section 22A(2) also covers the person or agent in charge of workers, and they have to take individual responsibility. The current Act does not distinguish among these categories of actors, so the maximum compound fine is only RM1,000 for a responsible individual.
Last year, when a glove factory in Klang was reported for flouting SOP, they could only be slapped with RM1,000 fine, and this incident had sparked public outcry. The Prime Minister’s 100 day report card event organiser could also only be fined RM1,000 recently for clearly violating SOP, and the public also fumed and cried ‘double-standards’. But that is the maximum compound fine. If we factor in general inflation, RM1,000 in 1988 would have been RM2310 today (by Oct 2021).
So that is exactly the shortcoming of the current Act, and most, if not all, of the public agree that a RM1,000 fine is ridiculously low for such a scale of SOP violation. So, I would expect that most would agree to raise the penalty amount, but what is in contention is only the quantum. It is important to acknowledge this common understanding first, that a law needs to have proportionate penalties imposed on the offenders so that the law would have some reasonable deterrent effect and serve justice by ensuring that those who irresponsibly pass risk and public health threat to the local community are made liable.
Concerns have also been raised on the reversal of burden of proof in Section 22A. Again this is common in laws that establish corporate liability. The check is that the corporation can prove the offence was committed without its knowledge or consent and it had taken all reasonable steps and made all appropriate efforts to prevent the occurrence of the offence and this is provided in Section 22A, too.
Now we come to the final 3 amendments that have seen the most protest.
The first draft proposed to amend Section 25 for the health authority to issue a compound fine for the offence committed by an individual (maximum RM10,000) or corporation (maximum RM1 million). The government has since revised down to RM500,000 for corporations and RM1,000 for individuals as of 16 December.
The draft to amend Section 24 on General Penalty for ‘any persons who commit an offence under the Act for which no penalty is expressly provided’ proposed that for an individual, the fine amount does not exceed RM100,000 or 7 years’ imprisonment or both. In response to concerns and protest, MOH on 16 December offered to lower this to a maximum of RM2,000 or 2 years’ imprisonment or both. The penalty for corporations is a fine not exceeding RM 2 million.
Lastly, Section 31 deals with the power of the Minister of Health to make regulations. The first amendment draft proposed to add a new Subsection 31(3) whereby any violation of regulations can be an offence which carries a fine not exceeding RM50,000 or 2 years’ imprisonment or both. The government has now proposed to adjust the amount to a maximum of RM1,500 or 2 years’ imprisonment or both for individuals. For corporations, the maximum fine is RM 1 million.
It should be noted that except for compound fines, the other penalties are imposed by the Courts, meaning that the individual or corporation concerned will have to be charged with an offence under Act 342 and a trial then follows.
Perhaps what seems to have escaped public attention is the fact that the MOH will use a three-tiered penalty system for compound fines, according to the seriousness of the offence. That means, most people might be wrongfully assuming that they would be imposed with the maximum fine compound for small offenses such as not wearing a mask in a public mandated area or not registering one’s information for checking in premises (e.g. using MySejahtera). Let us not assume that the maximum fine will be imposed in every case.
For clarity and to quell public concerns, the government could provide an indicative list of offence categories and the corresponding range of compound fines. However the latest compromise is RM1,000 maximum compound fine for individuals.
Some objections compare the maximum penalty with Penal Code such as homicide attempt and causing death by negligence, implying that the maximum penalty quantum is unjust, excessive and disproportionate. I beg to differ here.
From March to September 2021, just for workplace category alone there were 2,369 clusters, resulting in 195,130 cases and 522 deaths. On average every cluster has seen 82 cases, resulting in one death for 4.5 clusters. The largest outbreak during this period was the Senawang Industry Cluster, with 2,178 cases and 15 deaths recorded.
Could there not have been SOP violations or negligence on the part of employers which caused the loss of lives and the suffering of their employees or their loved ones? Any corporation or employer responsible for this harm or loss to their staff also violates an established principle of the Right to Life and Livelihood, i.e. that working conditions must be safe, healthy, and not demeaning to human dignity. What if the extent of harm was high in terms of hospitalisation, ICU and even deaths? And what if the employers are frequent or repeated offenders? Is the maximum penalty being proposed really disproportionate or excessive compared to a case of causing death by negligence?
The COVID-19 pandemic is already a tragedy for many families. If there are some irresponsible parties that caused or contributed to this, why is it not just to impose higher compound fines or haul them to court with higher penalties? If the maximum quantum is not just, the objectors should propose and justify their numbers as well. Expanding the scope of the Act to corporations can also be accompanied with fairness, distinguishing small businesses from big corporations.
It is understandable that there is distrust of the enforcement authorities, as seen from the instances of maximum compounds for minor offences and double standards in treatment of politicians during the Emergency period. While I do not condone arbitrary use or abuse of power, I also recognise the urgent need to ensure that Act 342 provides the necessary legal basis and proportionate penalties to deal with epidemics and pandemics.
In conclusion I urge the public to look at the Act 342 amendments holistically, understand and support the need for the amendments. The government, opposition lawmakers and civil society groups can still discuss the quantum for the maximum general and compound penalties, as well as other concerns, but the clock is ticking. To face the next impending wave of the pandemic, the government definitely needs the amendments by Monday, not next March.
The Sun Daily (Part 1) (Part 2)
Supported by Hafiz Hassan in his column article on 20 Dec 2021
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Suaram Podcast: Edisi COVID-19: Episode #3 - Isu Kesihatan di Malaysia Semasa Pandemik (14.12.2021)
Podcast URL: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5t5M11ebF1jILC1Hch7CYC
Episode Description
1.
Dahulunya, Malaysia pernah
diancam dengan kes-kes wabak seperti virus Nipah, virus Zika, Chikungunya,
selesema burung dan beberapa lagi lain. Berdasarkan pemerhatian Dr, boleh Dr
ceritakan pengalaman Malaysia dalam menangani wabak ini terdahulu?
CH:
Memang benar bahawa Malaysia pernah menangani wabak-wabak yang membawa
derita mahupun maut kepada masyarakat sejak kemerdekaan negara. Contoh-contoh wabak
penyakit pada zaman dulu berleluasa seperti campak, tibi, batuk kokol,
pertusis, polio dan lain-lain, semua ini kini telah dalam kawalan kerana
wujudnya vaksin yang berkesan dan diberi kepada kanak-kanak sejak awal.
Benar juga bahawa wabak penyakit baru yang lebih kontemporari terutamanya
Nipah dan SARS memberi cabaran yang besar kepada pihak pemerintah negara kita.
Semuanya dikendalikan dengan agak baik, kerana ciri-ciri penyakit berbeza
dengan COVID-19, orang yang dijangkiti lebih mudah dikesan dan dikuarantinkan. Hanya 5 kes SARS dan 2 kes MERS dilaporkan
kepada WHO yang telah dikendali oleh Malaysia, adalah dianggap penyakit telah
dibendung kerana wujud unit aktif terhadap pemantauan penyakit dengan kerjasama
antarabangsa dalam pengkongsian ilmu pengetahuan and informasi.
Susulan dan hasil daripada wabak SARS , Malaysia telah menetapkan satu
dasar strategi yang komprehensif yang berjudul: Malaysia Strategic Workplan for
Emerging Diseases (MySED Workplan) pada 2012. Versi kedua dikemaskini dan
dikeluarkan pada 2017 susulan ancaman wabak Zika, dalam versi dasar strategi
ini, Crisis Preparedness and Response Centre (ataupun lebih dikenali sebagai
CPRC) telah ditubuhkan. Ini telah menyediakan Malaysia menangani COVID-19 pada
peringkat awal dengan lebih bersistematik, dan Malaysia adalah di antara
negara-negara pertama yang dapat mengesan virus SARS-CoV-2 dengan secara PCR
dalam laboratori.
2.
Setahun yang lalu, negara
China mengumumkan kematian Covid-19 yang pertama (Januari 2020). Kini wabak ini
adalah antara 10 wabak yang membawa maut disenaraikan di dalam sejarah dunia. Pada
pandangan anda, adakah Malaysia sebenarnya bersedia untuk menghadapi situasi
pandemik sedemikian?
a) Dari segi fasiliti (keperluan dan kemudahan kesihatan)
CH:
COVID-19
adalah antara wabak penyakit yang sukar ditangani. Ia jauh lebih mudah
dijangkiti dan memberi risiko maut yang berkali ganda lebih tinggi daripada
selsema influenza.
Oleh kerana konflik aktiviti manusia dengan alam semulajadi kerap berlaku dan komuniti masyarakat semakin berpeluang berinteraksi dengan haiwan liar , adalah dijangka wabak-wabak penyakit seperti COVID-19 akan berlaku dengan kekerapan yang lebih tinggi berbanding dengan zaman dulu.
Walau bagaimanapun, COVID-19 wujud atau tidak, fasiliti kesihatan di KKM haruslah dipertingkatkan, kerana kapasiti sekarang telah jadi sukar memuaskan permintaan orang awam yang semakin tinggi. Sebelum pandemik, sesiapa yang kerap pergi melawat hospital pakar kerajaan ataupun hospital besar negeri, akan tahu bagaimana sesak dengan orang ramai dalam fasiliti tersebut. Bilangan katil juga tidak mencukupi di sesetengah hospital; banyak alat peralatan perubatan perlu diperbaiki ataupun dibeli yang baru bagi menaikkan taraf ataupun “upgrade”; lebih banyak hospital ataupun klinik dibangunkan terutama di kawasan bandaraya yang sering menghadapi kesesakan.
COVID-19 adalah lawan yang luar biasa. Dengan jangkitan yang berleluasa ataupun hilang kawalan pada peringkat komuniti tempatan, tiada negara boleh menampung permintaan rawatan penyakit kalau setiap hari ada kemasukan beribu-ribu pesakit baru harus dijaga. Jadi, dari pengurusan dan kawalan penyakit, fasiliti yang lebih penting dan diperlukan adalah seperti apa yang telah diumumkan oleh kerajaan dalam bajet baru-baru ini: Institut Penyakit Berjangkit di Bandar Enstek Negeri Sembilan.
Haruslah saya nyatakan juga, usaha menangani situasi pandemik dan rawatan bukan hanya tanggungjawab kerajaan sahaja, seolah-olah sektor kesihatan swasta boleh dikecualikan. Mereka juga diminta oleh orang awam untuk memikul beban bersama kerajaan juga, dan memberi kemudahan kepada pesakit yang dijangkiti ataupun dikuarantinkan. Dalam tempoh krisis kemanusiaan, usahlah mereka katakan menjaga keuntungan ataupun ‘bottom line’ mereka – pihak pengurus fasiliti perubatan haruslah diingatkan tentang Tanggungjawab bersama dan ‘People before profit’ – Kebajikan masyarakat didahulukan.
b) Dari segi kakitangan kesihatan
CH:
Sudah pasti sekarang frontliners kita amat berpengalaman semasa
menghadapi pandemik COVID-19, sama juga frontliners di seluruh dunia, tetapi
wabak pada masa depan mungkin muncul dalam bentuk dan cara jangkitan yang jauh
beza. Jadi, persiapan terhadap wabak akan datang adalah penting dari segi
kawalan penyakit wabak.
Tidak dapat dinafikan bahawa lebih ramai kakitangan kesihatan
terutamanya pengamal-pengamal perubatan ataupun ‘frontliners’ anggota-anggota
barisan hadapan diperlukan untuk menjalankan tugas untuk menangani dan merawat
jangkitan penyakit baru, tetapi lebih-lebihnya untuk memuaskan permintaan
perkhidmatan kesihatan menjaga orang awam.
Untuk makluman anda, rancangan kerajaan untuk memperkembangkan tenaga kerja terutamanya untuk penjagaan kesihatan, telah ditetapkan dan sedang dijalankan. Langkah tersebut adalah untuk memenuhi permintaan servis penjagaan kesihatan atau perubatan yang semakin meningkat di Malaysia. Rancangan adalah mustahak dan munasabah, TETAPI masalahnya adalah pelaksanaan rancangan haruslah diberi kerjasama oleh pihak lain daripada kerajaan juga, seperti Jabatan Perkhidmatan Awam yang menentukan dan mewujudkan jawatan tetap rasmi kepada pengamal-pengamal perubatan yang menunggu. Situasi inilah adalah konundrum yang dihadapi oleh doktor kontrak.
3.
Berikutan keadaan pandemik
ini, banyak kelemahan yang tidak dipedulikan mula timbul. Salah satu
daripadanya adalah isu kontrak bagi kakitangan kesihatan. Seperti yang dapat
kita lihat dalam laporan berita mengatakan bahawa adanya jurang yang besar antara kakitangan kesihatan kontrak dan kakitangan tetap. Dr boleh terangkan
mengapa jurang ini berlaku dan apakah perbezaan antaranya? Dan mungkin Dr boleh
kembangkan lagi bagaimana masalah ini berlaku? Apakah antara faktor disebalik
isu ini?
CH:
Status kakitangan kesihatan kontrak dan kakitangan tetap ada perbezaan dan jurang, ini sememangnya dapat dijangkakan. Manfaat dan kebajikan kepada kakitangan perkhidmatan awam sepatutnya hanya diberi layanan setimpal sekiranya anda adalah kakitangan tetap.
Tetapi, isu atau masalah kontrak ini timbul kerana dasar kerajaan yang
tidak koheren, menyebabkan ramai yang berlayak diterima sebagai kakitangan
tetap terpinggir kat luar sebagai kakitangan kontrak. Ini tidak adil pada titik
permulaan, jadi, ini adalah tanggungjawab kerajaan untuk menjaga kebajikan
doktor kontrak dan cuba memberi layanan yang hampir serupa kepada kedua-dua
kumpulan, janganlah ada diskriminasi kerana status kerja yang di luar kawalan
pengamal-pengamal kesihatan tersebut. Mereka bekerja sama panjang dan sama
berat, sepatutnya diberi manfaat yang hampir sama.
Janganlah menyalahkan graduan
perubatan yang ramai, ini semua adalah dalam jangkaan kerajaan semasa buat unjuran jumlah permintaan jawatan
dan jumlah graduan serta jumlah tenaga kerja yang diperlukan oleh sektor
kesihatan. Kerajaan haruslah mengubahsuai dasar polisi bagi mengambil lebih
ramai doktor kontrak ke dalam sistem perkhidmatan awam dan mengecualikan
sesetengah bahagian dalam kementerian dalam rancangan optimisasi saiz
kakitangan.
4.
Selain isu kakitangan
kesihatan, berita seperti katil hospital tidak cukup, pesakit kongsi tangki oksigen
juga turut dilaporkan. Adakah ini masalah yang turut dihadapi oleh
negara–negara lain? Adakah fasiliti kesihatan di negara kita memang tidak mampu
untuk menampung pesakit? Adakah ini masalah yang baru semasa pandemik atau
masalah yang sedia ada sebelum pandemik berlaku?
CH:
Ya, banyak negara mengalami masalah tersebut, ada yang menghadapi
situasi jauh lebih teruk daripada Malaysia. Contohnya, India semasa dilanda
dengan gelombang jangkitan Delta varian tahun ini. Bersyukurlah kerana Malaysia
masih ada sistem kesihatan awam yang sempurna dan tidak bergantung banyak
terhadap sektor swasta. Berfikirlah apa rupanya jika kerajaan haruslah sentiasa
berunding dengan pihak swasta yang berbeza atas pelaksanaan program atau dasar
memberi rawatan dan ujian COVID-19.
Memang benar bahawa pandemik COVID-19 kali ini, seperti apa yang berlaku
pada bulan Julai dan Ogos tahun ini, telah memberi cabaran agak besar sampai
melumpuhkan sesetengah sistem penjagaan di negeri-negeri dan hospital-hospital
tertentu. Akibat daripadanya, ramai yang dijangkiti dan dikorban kerana tidak
dapat rawatan dengan sempat.
Sebelum pandemik COVID-19, sudah diketahui bahawa bilangan katil di
hospital KKM adalah agak penuh, sehingga semua hospital utama negeri sampai 70%
dan ke atas. Hospital Tengku Ampuan
Rahimah di Klang telah pun mencapai hampir 90%. Tragedi kematian
beratus-ratusan berlaku di Klang semasa bulan Julai-Ogos adalah sangat sedih
dan mengecewakan. Jadi kerajaan haruslah mengutamakan isu kesihatan selepas apa
yang telah berlaku di sektor kesihatan awam semasa pandemik. Malangnya, dari
segi bajet 2021 dan 2022, saya tak nampak kemahuan politik yang kuat dan ketara
berkenaan peningkatan pelaburan dalam sektor kesihatan awam.
5.
Dalam belanjawan yang baru,
adakah Kerajaan memberikan lebih banyak bajet dalam meningkatkan fasiliti
kesihatan dalam fasa pemulihan Covid-19?
CH:
Dukacitanya saya maklumkan, Tidak, kerajaan gagal melabur secukupnya
mahupun merentasi jangkaan minimum saya. Peningkatan peruntukan untuk KKM
adalah terendah dalam 6 tahun, hanya sebanyak 1.5%, Ya, walaupun ada penambahan
bajet bagi pengurusan ia hanya 3%, saya anggap jumlah ini hanya cukup bagi
pelarasan seperti gaji kakitangan.
Apa yang sangat mengecewakan saya adalah peruntukan bagi bajet pembangunan.
Sebanyak RM440 juta telah dipotong. Apa mesej yang hendak kerajaan hantarkan,
sedangkan masyarakat, aktivis dan orang awam banyak menyatakan bahawa pelaburan
serius haruslah dituju kepada sektor kesihatan awam, dan pembangunan serta
naik-taraf fasiliti dan kemudahan KKM harus dirancang dan dilaksanakan.
Mestilah anda tahu, jika nak bina satu hospital, ia akan ambil masa tempoh
lebih kurang 5 tahun. Kalau lewat bermula projek, maka terlewatlah manfaatnya
dibawa kepada masyarakat setempat. Kelewatan semua ini adalah berkaitan dengan
peruntukan, dan ini bukan perkara yang remeh-temeh, tetapi melibatkan nyawa dan
kesejahteraan orang ramai.
6.
Malaysia dijangka selesai
memberi suntikan lengkap vaksin COVID-19 kepada sekurang-kurangnya 80 peratus populasi
negara menjelang 3 Disember depan. Imuniti kelompok adalah harapan dalam memutuskan
rantaian jangkitan wabak ini. Setakat 17 Nov lalu, tahap vaksinasi negara juga
mencapai 76.2%. Walau bagaimanapun, ada sesetengah individu atau kelompok yang
tidak mahu mengambil suntikan vaksinasi. Pada pandangan Dr, adakah seseorang
mempunyai hak untuk menolak daripada divaksin atau ini merupakan kewajiban
rakyat di setiap negara untuk ambil?
CH:
Ya, seseorang ada hak untuk menentukan apa yang dimasukkan ke dalam badan
sendiri. Tiada orang sepatutnya buat keputusan bagi seseorang, jika orang itu
boleh berfikir dengan waras dan umurnya cukup matang. Konsen, ataupun
‘persetujuan’ individu adalah mustahak dalam pertimbangan etika perubatan. Sekiranya
pembuatan seseorang tidak mengganggu ataupun menjejaskan hak orang lain, dialah
yang harus bertanggungjawab atas keputusan dan tingkah laku sendiri. Dalam isu
vaksin COVID-19, orang yang menolak vaksin mungkin berpeluang dijangkiti dan
mengalami penyakit teruk sehingga risiko kematian, tapi mengikut pengetahuan
sains terkini, orang yang divaksin ataupun tidak divaksin masing-masing ada
peluang yang lebih kurang sama untuk menjangkiti orang lain. Jadi, orang yang
tolak vaksin tidak harus dipersalahkan dan didiskriminasikan. Walaupun
keputusan untuk tidak menerima vaksin, pada pendapat saya, saya tidak menggalakkan.
Saya boleh memberi keterangan kenapa vaksin ada banyak manfaat, tetapi jika
seseorang masih tegas atas pendirian itu, dialah yang akan menghadapi risiko
dan mungkin akibat yang lebih besar. Saya tidak akan berasa simpati jika
keputusan seseorang memudaratkan sendiri.
Akan tetapi, saya berasa kerajaan tidak wajar untuk menjadikan imunisasi COVID-19 sebagai wajib ataupun de-facto wajib. Seorang individu mesti ada hak untuk membuat keputusan terhadap apa yang dimasukkan ke dalamnya sendiri. Jika tidak, masyarakat ini adalah amat dahsyat jika seseorang boleh dipaksa.
TWN submission on the CBA 2.0 preliminary findings (6.12.2021)
Below are Third World Network’s initial issues and concerns regarding the CBA 2.0 preliminary findings. We strongly call for more details and information, especially with regard to the data and their sources, the CBA’s methodology and assumptions, the list of interviewees (categories if not actual individual names for personal privacy protection), and the interview questionnaires. We also put on record our concern that this CBA is conducted by a Ministry without the mandate nor competence, on a very important public interest issue that is the responsibility of other ministries, i.e. the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs.
1) Identity of the Third Party Consultant: Who is it? What are the credentials for appointing this consultant? Who funded the study? Can the TPC make a declaration of conflict of interest, if any? (Update: the latest response from the UPC admin on 5.12.2021 still did not reveal the identity of the TPC, but admitted that the private industry has funded the study)
2) Conflict of Interest: The composition of the steering and technical committees both look very much driven by the pharmaceutical and private healthcare sector major players (PhAMA, MOPI, MMA, APHM and even US-based PhRMA) who have direct interest in stopping or reversing the Cabinet-approved Medicines Price Mechanism (MPM) policy. A Senior Industry Representative from PhAMA is even the co-chair for the technical committee.
3) Need for a full study report with details and information: The preliminary findings are just results presented in numbers, without clear and specific methodology, assumptions, supporting data and calculation process for the public to validate and review each of the findings.
4) Misrepresentation of the MOH’s proposed Medicines Price Mechanism (Slide 8): The study used a two-tier margin system to calculate the mark-up margin (35% for < RM1,000 per unit drug; 10% for >RM1,000/unit), whereas the MOH has 4 tiers. Also, it is not correct to assume ALL other drugs in the market will have MPM mark-up control even in Phase 2 -- only prescription drugs will be covered. What are the 5000 medicines selected for the CBA2.0?
5) The first CBA was on Phase 1 of the proposed MPM, covering about 600 single-sourced prescription medicines available in the Malaysian market. Comparing that with 5000 (undisclosed list) medical products in CBA 2.0 is highly questionable.
6) Wrong assumption on the MPM model (Slide 10) : MPM policy is to regulate mark-up range at wholesale and retail levels, not ‘discount on cost of therapy’ as shown in the “Price-volume vs price scenarios” graph. In fact, in the CBA1.0, the study showed that 30% of medicines might even experience initial upward adjustments of prices; did the second study consider these gains for the wholesalers and retailers?
7) The exclusion of consumer and patient advocacy groups for the interviews (Slide 11): The interviewees are industry-dominant, not taking account of the public health and well-being costs. In the Webinar-format ‘consultation’ conducted by MPC, we were told that the patients under the Patient Assistance Programme were interviewed instead of what it is written as ‘patient advocacy groups’ - the patients may not have medicine access issues because they are sponsored or subsidised by the pharmaceutical companies. Insufficient access to affordable cancer medicines is a major issue voiced by patient advocacy groups such as Together Against Cancer and this is absent in what was presented by MPC.
8) No counterfactual in the analysis: For example in Slide 15, the assertion made claiming that 33% or 2,600 clinics will shut down. We do not know how the study arrived at that number. If it was based on interviews or a survey, we need to look at the questionnaire and response (sample size). The most damaging part of the assertion is that there is no counterfactual. We know that in recent years there were clinics shutting down, it was also the trend before the COVID-19 pandemic. If the study is serious, those clinics shut down in the counterfactual cannot all be attributed to the MPM policy.
9) Possible exaggerated claim in Slide 15: There is an assertion that the MPM policy will cause a 35-40% drop of total hospital revenue. According to the Malaysia National Health Accounts 2020 preliminary data, private hospitals contributed RM14.553 billion to the total health expenditure. 35% of total hospital revenue could mean a figure close to RM5 billion. Did private hospitals overcharge so much to the tune of RM5 billion a year, beyond the MPM proposed mark-up range? This admission of the difference is simply astonishing, we would like to understand how it is derived.
Given that there are such good prospects in the projection in private healthcare industry stated in Slide 13 (ie. RM1 Trillion economic value, RM44 billion planned investments), it is baffling to understand why the CBA 2.0 result claimed that “hospital industry operates on tight margins” (Slide 15). The wordings claiming that the hospitals “consider shutting down outpatient wings” sounded unfortunately more like a public threat than what could be qualified or quantified in the study.
10) Baseline problem for the B40 households in Slide 16: It is wrong to assume an increase in private healthcare usage especially for the B40 households based on the current baseline -- this is because the current high price or unaffordable prices are probably keeping a significant number of the medicines out of reach for treatment. With the possible effect of the MPM policy resulting in more affordable pricing of medicines, more B40 households should be expected to get access. The analysis in Slide 16 seems to have the intention to pit T20 and M40 against B40 in a moral narrative. There is no need to do that, as we are talking about access to medicines for all, especially for B40 households. Furthermore, M40 and T20 households do not deserve to be overcharged or exploited for the industry’s higher profit margin. In any event, the B40 relies on the public health system while the price regulation mechanism seeks to particularly reduce out-of-pocket expenses of the rakyat.
The annual premium cost avoidance result in the same Slide 16 also suffers from similar prejudice, given that we know why not many B40 households are among the private health insurance purchasers, simply because they cannot afford it. And one of the major reasons why the premium could be prohibitively high for B40 households, is probably the medicine prices. Hence, there is no point in projecting the premium cost ‘avoidance’ based on the current scenario.
11) Doubtful Basis of the claim of fewer Innovative Medicine launches (Slide 21) : There is no counterfactual -- could it be due to the trend of the pharmaceutical industry having fewer new chemical entities? The MPM policy regulates the mark-up upper limit for wholesalers and retailers only, the medicines manufacturers should not feel deterred or discouraged to introduce their new medicines in the market. They can still declare and sell the products at their proposed prices. Given that these medicines would have certain healthcare demand in the country, would the companies really want to give up the Malaysian market entirely? So many other countries have some sort of Medicines Price Regulation policy, do they experience the same fate after the policy implementation?
12) Peculiar case of loss in medical tourism due to more affordable medicines pricing (Slide 19): The entire assumption seems based on loss of innovative medicine access (referring to the previous Point 11). If that is not logical, then it makes no sense to say that healthcare travellers would shun Malaysia as the destination if the medicine prices become lower. This MPM policy would instead increase the competitive edge of Malaysia against regional competitors such as Thailand for healthcare travellers.
Industry attempting to block medicine price regulation (7.12.2021)
MEDICINES are essential for the sick or injured, and can be a matter of life and death. It is not an ordinary commodity but a necessity for survival or recovery.
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