Benefits of Integrated Healthcare Clustering
Ministry of HealthSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns the size and impact of integrated healthcare clusters, as Er Dr Lee Bee Wah inquired about population coverage, Hong Kong comparisons, and improvements to A&E and scan waiting times. Minister for Health Gan Kim Yong stated that each cluster serves 1 to 1.5 million residents, similar to Hong Kong, to better manage an ageing population and chronic disease burden. He explained that the reorganisation facilitates a shift toward community-based, person-centred care, which aims to reduce the public's reliance on specialist and emergency hospital services. The Minister also noted that this model enables the scaling of healthcare programmes and provides staff with broader professional development opportunities to enhance patient care. These changes are designed to implement healthcare transformations more swiftly and decisively to meet future volume and complexity.
Transcript
23 Er Dr Lee Bee Wah asked the Minister for Health (a) what is the average size that each integrated healthcare cluster will serve; (b) how does it compare to Hong Kong; (c) how will this new clustering benefit the public in expediting the waiting time at A&E departments; and (d) how will this improve the average waiting period for a patient who needs to be scanned for suspected serious illnesses like cancer.
Mr Gan Kim Yong: Each cluster will serve a population of 1 million to 1.5 million Singapore residents. This is comparable to Hong Kong, which also has healthcare clusters serving populations of 0.5 million to 1.8 million each.
Healthcare 2020 outlined our plan to expand capacity, improve quality and enhance the affordability of healthcare services. Even as we implement Healthcare 2020, we need to plan ahead further into the future. Last year, three key shifts to prepare for our healthcare needs beyond 2020 were announced beyond hospital to community, beyond quality to value and beyond healthcare to health. This transformation is necessary as our healthcare needs will grow in volume and complexity due to our ageing population and increased chronic disease burden. For this reason, we need to organise ourselves better so that we can implement the transformation more swiftly and decisively.
The reorganisation will enable the integrated clusters to deliver more comprehensive and person-centreed healthcare services that are appropriate and closer to the patients. This will help to reduce the need to access specialist care and the accident and emergency department at the hospitals.
The reorganisation will also facilitate scaling up of programmes and services to benefit more Singaporeans. In addition, the integrated clusters will be able to offer their employees a wider and deeper range of professional development opportunities, and a broader platform for cross-learning that will benefit staff and, ultimately, our patients.