Saudi Arabia - HealthcareSaudi Arabia - Healthcare
Overview
Healthcare remains a top priority for the SAG. In 2018 the government allocated $39.2 billion for the Healthcare and Social Development sector, more than 10 percent over the 2017 figure. More than 22 percent of that budget will be spent on the initiatives of Saudi Vision 2030. The healthcare budget also stipulates the construction of 36 new hospitals (8,950 beds) two medical cities (2,350 beds) were expected to be completed by the end of 2018 but are still not completed. The Ministry is also expected to build an additional 18 hospitals with a bed capacity of 9,904 over the next two years.
In line with the government Vision 2030 and the 2020 National Transformation Plan (NTP), the Ministry of Health was expected to spend close to $71 billion over a five-year period ending in 2020. Among the objectives of the NTP for the healthcare sector in 2020 are:
- To expand the role of the private sector from 25 to 35 percent of total healthcare expenditures;
- To increase the number of licensed medical facilities from 40 to 100;
- To increase the number of internationally accredited hospitals;
- To double the number of primary healthcare visits per capita from two to four;
- To decrease the percentage of smoking and obesity by two percent and one percent from baseline respectively;
- To double the percentage of patients receiving healthcare after critical care or long-term hospitalization within four weeks from relaease from the hosptial from 25 to 50 percent
- To focus on improving the quality of preventive and therapeutic healthcare services; and,
- To increase the focus on digital healthcare innovations.
According to the International Diabetes Federation, Saudi Arabia has an 18.5 percent prevalence rate of diabetes with 3.85 million cases of diabetic adults in 2017. The British medical journal the Lancet has placed Saudi Arabia in third position worldwide in terms of obesity, and the latest figures from the medical community indicated that Saudi Arabia has one of the highest percentage of bariatric procedures including sleeve gastrectomy, gastric bypass, and the placement of gastric band.
Best Prospects include:
- Education and training services for physicians, nurses and technical staff;
- Information technology and data management services related to the digitization of patient records and billing information;
- Hospital management and joint ventures with Saudi partners;
- Investment in pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities for vaccines, sterile injectables, plasma, generics and other pharmaceuticals;
- Provision of support services and investments to establish local capabilities in bioequivalence centers, cold chain logistics, outpatient imaging and contract research organization (CROs);
- Provision of health insurance;
- Home healthcare, rehabilitation, and long-term care;
- Laboratories; and
- Primary healthcare and medical cities.
Leading Sub-Sectors
- Healthcare Services
- Medical Devices
- Pharma and biosciences
- Dental Services
The Saudi population is relatively young and will still be considered young over the next 12-15 years despite a demographic change in the age structure. Based on a study by Oxford Economics, Saudi Arabia will have a large segment of its population between the ages of 40 and 59, expected to increase by 50 percent by 2035, which, in turn, will dictate a shift in the provision of healthcare services. That shift will be felt more in providing care for non-communicable diseases, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and obesity. Because more of the population will also have reached the age of 60, the demand for geriatric care and home healthcare is also expected to expand. Those demographic changes also complement a rising demand for insurance coverage, which will be mandatory across the board under a unified health insurance policy being planned by the Cooperative Council of Health Insurance (CCHI).
On another note, privatization is expected to be a key focus area for the Saudi government. Among the immediate strategic objectives set forth in the NTP are:
- Privatize a medical city through a PPP scheme;
- Increase the private sector share of spending in healthcare through alternative financing methods and service providers;
- Update and expand primary care;
- Provide additional rehabilitation and long-term care beds;
- Establish additional medical cities;
- Privatize King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Center; and
- Update and expand laboratory and radiology services.
The Ministry of Health has released a tender for the development of Health Clusters responsible for the provision of healthcare services in the Eastern Region. This pilot project covers approximately 2.9 million citizens in the Eastern Province of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia—an area currently served by 35 hospitals and 250 primary health care (PHC) centers, in addition to specialty providers.