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Updated Monday, March 8, 2010 10:51 pm TWN, By Chen Ching-fang and Sofia Wu, CNA Health minister resigns over health insurance fee hike planYaung said at a hastily called news conference that he could not go along with Wu's insistence that 75 percent of the people should be unaffected by the premium increase plan and that only the wealthiest 25 percent should be made to pay more. According to various schemes drawn up by the DOH's Bureau of National Health Insurance, Yaung said he could only assure Wu that 59 percent of local people would remain unaffected by the adjustment plan. "We have tried to the best of our ability... but we still have been unable to meet the premier's target, " Yaung said. "Against this backdrop, I should not remain in my post." In his resignation statement, Yaung further said he has consistently felt that the government should make introducing a second-generation health insurance program its ultimate reform goal. A second-generation health insurance program would calculate premiums based on total household incomes instead of the existing system that is based only on the insured people's earned income without taking into account unearned income such as stock market profits. The new system would ensure that rich people would pay more in insurance fees. His resignation leaves the second-generation plan in limbo. Yaung was only the second non-physician DOH minister in the department's 39-year history. During his tenure of a little under eight months, he experienced several major controversial events, including the lifting of a ban on bone-in U.S. beef and the H1N1 immunization program. Yang had vowed shortly after assuming office that he would oversee reforms in Taiwan's health insurance program. At the time, he said Taiwan has a widely acclaimed health insurance program, but it is on shaky ground because of its long-term financial straits. As health minister, Yaung said, he was obligated to transform the program into a financially viable system. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here Comments March 8, 2010 why@ Reply Why is insurance coupled to the income you have? Is there any correlation of higher income person putting a larger load on healthcare? What is the logic? People with less income often have a much more unhealthy lifestyle so they cost more to society. So? You should get for what you pay for, isn't that fair? Higher incomes already pay more taxes and that is already without any solid logic and reason. So the government can't pull from that pool? If you work hard, for what? To pay your lazy and irresponsible neighbor? Let's smoke more, let's drink more! Let's eat more! Let's spend more time and money on playing computer games instead of going to walk or work. Let's be more irresponsible in traffic. It does not mater at all because other will pay the accumulated cost of society anyhow. March 8, 2010 why@ Why not charge fat, cholesterol containing foods? Why not increase price of cigarettes, pub tax, bar tax, beetle-nut tax. Tax food, restaurants, coffee shops on the level of calories in their food, increase the price of highly carbonated drinks. Charge an airport tax of the total weight of person + luggage is over an allowed maximum. Charge health tax on polluting companies, video game machine tax, drive down obesity by government incentives, promote healthy food, get everyone in the city on a bike for commuting. Tax everything that is unhealthy and then conclude if there is still a gap in 10 years from now to cover medical care. March 9, 2010 ludahai_twn@ Health care premiums should also be based partially on lifestyle choices. I exercise nearly every day, don't smoke, rarely (once a year) drink alcohol, don't chew betel nut ... why should I pay more simply because I have a higher income when my lifestyle choices make me far less likely to have to be a burden on the health care system??? |
![]() Department of Health (DOH) Minister Yaung Chih-liang announced his surprise resignation Monday following a disagreement with Premier Wu Den-yih on how the national health insurance ... Enlarge Photo National Breaking News Most Read
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