Hong Kong A&E visits drop nearly 12% in first week of new fees

One week after Hong Kong's public hospitals introduced a new A&E pricing regime on January 1, visits fell 11.9% to 32,147 patients across 18 departments compared to last year, while fee waivers tripled. A Hospital Authority spokesman said the changes enable better focus on true emergencies.

One week after the Hospital Authority rolled out a new pricing regime on January 1—aimed at charging higher fees for milder, affordable cases to bolster public healthcare sustainability—A&E attendance dropped sharply.

From January 1 to 7, 32,147 patients visited the 18 A&Es, down 11.9% from the prior year. The number benefiting from fee waivers tripled under the reform.

"The service data of the past week shows that the fees and charges reform allowed A&Es to perform their emergency care function more effectively," a spokesman said. "A&Es can better concentrate resources, treat patients with urgent medical needs more effectively and improve treatment efficiency for urgent cases."

The changes address systemic pressures, including an ageing population and HK$3 billion in annual public hospital expenditures, by steering non-urgent cases to alternative services.

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Hong Kong's public hospital A&E pricing changes, launched January 1, have further reduced visits, with semi-urgent and non-urgent cases down 24% in the first 10 days versus last year—building on an initial 12% overall decline in the first week. Health Secretary Lo Chung-mau highlighted the reform's success in guiding mild cases to alternatives, while 60,000 fee waivers were approved, 80% same-day.

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Nine patients in Hong Kong avoided higher emergency fees when new hospital charges took effect on New Year's Day. Hospital Authority chief executive Libby Lee reported a smooth rollout. The changes target sustainability for the taxpayer-subsidized public healthcare system.

Hong Kong's finance chief Paul Chan has confirmed an early operating account surplus, driven by strong financial markets, and vowed more support for the elderly. Speaking at a public forum, he addressed welfare demands while noting that social spending was not cut despite last year's deficit.

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The French government has decided to keep hospital tariffs at 2025 levels for 2026, with no increase despite inflation and strains on human resources. Hospital federations, both public and private, denounce this as a disguised massive savings plan and call for at least a 1% rise. This comes after Parliament adopted a hospital budget boosted by 850 million euros.

 

 

 

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