By Agnes Salyanty & Maria Serenade Sinurat
One morning in Could 2022, Susanti (41), wakened with a pointy ache in her abdomen. At first, she thought she was pregnant. However after an ultrasound, she obtained devastating information: a tumor was rising inside her. She instantly turned to BPJS Kesehatan, Indonesia’s Nationwide Well being Insurance coverage program, for therapy. The surgical procedure was profitable, and BPJS lined the price. However the bills didn’t cease there. She nonetheless needed to pay extra out-of-pocket prices for remedy and colostomy baggage, which needed to be ordered from outdoors the island. The prices rapidly added up. Throughout this troublesome time, her household stepped in to assist her handle the monetary burden.
Susanti’s story is considered one of many. For low-income girls, entry to healthcare is usually a problem. In Girls’s World Banking’s newest report, Unpaid, Underserved, Unprotected: Fixing the Healthcare Financing Hole for Indonesian Girls, we discovered that whereas BPJS now covers 98.45% of Indonesia’s inhabitants, practically 20% of enrollees stay inactive, as many battle with monetary constraints, lack of understanding, or difficulties navigating the system.
The unseen price of restricted healthcare entry
Girls bear a heavier healthcare burden than males. Their medical wants are better, but they’ve fewer monetary assets. For 16.7% of girls, maternal healthcare alone consumes over 5% of their annual family revenue. Girls-headed households are most affected, spending 71% of their non-food price range on public hospital care and 112% on personal hospitals.
With such excessive prices, many ladies spend much less on their very own healthcare—not as a result of they want it much less, however as a result of they merely can’t afford it. Nonetheless, the problem goes past affordability; it’s additionally about how the system is designed. Specialist companies, diagnostic exams, and non-generic medicines typically require extra out-of-pocket funds. Being pregnant ultrasounds, power illness therapies, and even emergency care will be expensive. Confronted with these bills, girls typically make troublesome decisions: delaying or skipping vital care, borrowing cash, or promoting valuables to cowl prices. Non-public insurance coverage may assist, however it stays out of attain for a lot of.
Novalia, a 22-year-old mom of two in Jayapura, is among the many many ladies affected by insufficient healthcare protection. Throughout her second being pregnant, she found that the native well being heart didn’t have an ultrasound machine, and nobody supplied her a referral. Despite the fact that she was lined by BPJS, she nonetheless needed to pay Rp 900,000 for 3 ultrasounds past protection. To afford it, she bought her earrings. “Generally, promoting jewelry was the one fast answer. My husband didn’t need me to do it, however it was the one choice we had,” she stated.
Novalia additionally paid out of pocket for her youngsters’s medicines and their first go to to the Puskesmas. Her expertise illustrates how gaps within the well being system—mixed with restricted monetary choices—can depart girls shouldering the hidden prices of maternal care on their very own.

A college pupil and mom of two, she runs a small meals enterprise from the home she shares with seven members of the family.
Making healthcare financing work for girls
No girl ought to have to decide on between her well being and monetary safety. A stronger, extra versatile healthcare system can guarantee girls get the care they want with out monetary pressure. Right here’s how change can occur.
Bringing monetary literacy into healthcare
Many ladies assume BPJS covers all medical prices, solely to be shocked by extra out-of-pocket bills. With out monetary planning, they battle to pay for specialist care, medicines, or maternity companies. Healthcare amenities can do greater than present therapy; they can assist girls put together for medical bills.
Midwives, Puskesmas, and hospitals can introduce girls to monetary planning instruments and assist them perceive BPJS advantages, personal insurance coverage, and financial savings choices. Group teams additionally play a key function in making monetary literacy extra accessible in every day life.
However consciousness alone isn’t sufficient; it takes collaboration. The Ministry of Well being, OJK, and BPJS Kesehatan can work collectively to develop nationwide monetary literacy applications that make well being financing simpler to navigate. On the similar time, the Ministry of Finance can introduce incentives to encourage monetary planning for healthcare by public training and digital platforms.
When well being, finance, and training align, girls usually are not simply knowledgeable; they’re ready. With the appropriate assist, they’ll entry healthcare with out worry of economic hardship
Making BPJS extra versatile by higher coordination
Even with monetary literacy, girls want a system that works for them. Presently, BPJS and personal insurance coverage coordination just isn’t seamless, making it troublesome to cowl prices effectively. A well-designed Coordination of Advantages (CoB) system would enable girls to mix BPJS and personal insurance coverage to scale back monetary gaps. However unclear guidelines and sophisticated processes make this troublesome for hospitals and insurers.
To alter this, the Ministry of Well being wants to ascertain clear cost-sharing guidelines and BPJS Kesehatan must simplify claims processing. Pilot applications in city and rural areas can check enhancements earlier than rolling them out nationwide. A centralized digital system would additionally pace up claims and cut back forms.
Increasing inexpensive well being financing by public-private partnerships
Even with BPJS, many ladies battle to afford healthcare. These with irregular incomes want extra versatile fee choices, comparable to well being financial savings accounts and microinsurance with small, frequent premiums. Midwives, as trusted healthcare suppliers, can introduce girls to those monetary instruments, whereas partnerships with fintech and banks could make them accessible.
One profitable instance is the partnership between Girls’s World Banking, Financial institution Negara Indonesia (BNI), and the Indonesian Midwives Affiliation. By coaching midwives as banking brokers, this system helped pregnant girls open well being financial savings accounts at clinics. This allowed them to steadily save for the prices of childbirth, lowering monetary stress and strengthening the financial function of midwives. Increasing such fashions would assist extra girls entry care with out monetary hardship.
Modern financing for casual employees
Many ladies within the casual sector have unpredictable incomes and no well being advantages. With practically 60% of Indonesia’s workforce in casual jobs, healthcare prices is usually a heavy burden. Conventional insurance coverage fashions typically fail to satisfy their wants.
Monetary companies suppliers can assist by embedding installment funds, micro well being financial savings, and pay-later choices into digital wallets and neighborhood financial savings platforms, making it simpler for girls to save lots of in small, manageable quantities. Cooperatives, unions, and digital work platforms may assist group-based financing, serving to casual employees entry collective well being plans with decrease premiums and higher protection. Increasing these fashions may make healthcare extra inexpensive, accessible, and sustainable for uninsured and underinsured employees.
Investing in girls’s well being financing has a ripple impact far past the person. It strengthens households, communities, and economies. Eradicating monetary obstacles is simply step one; actual change comes from embedding options that guarantee girls’s well being safety at each stage. A very inclusive, women-centered strategy isn’t simply an choice. It’s the muse for designing insurance policies and monetary companies that provide long-term safety and assist a resilient future for girls.
