In order to ensure employees' basic medical use of drugs and reasonably control drug costs, the Ministry of Labor and Social Security officially promulgated the "National Basic Medical Insurance Drug Catalog" on May 25, 2000. The catalog was produced after multiple demonstrations, an expert advisory group classified the drugs and prepared a candidate catalog, and organized more than a thousand selection experts across the country to conduct voting and selection.
The selection of the "National Basic Medical Insurance Drug Catalog" adheres to five principles:
1. The principle of ensuring safe and effective medication for employees. All drugs included in the "National Basic Medical Insurance Drug Catalog" must be included in the "People's Republic of China and the Pharmacopoeia", or meet the standards issued by the national ministry, or be officially imported.
2. The principle of ensuring the basic medical needs of employees. All drugs included in the catalog must be therapeutic drugs, excluding some categories of drugs that mainly play a nutritional and nourishing role.
3. The principle of encouraging and supporting the advancement of medical science and technology, and including new drugs that are proven to be effective, reasonably priced, and easy to use through clinical practice, should be included as much as possible.
Four. Adhere to the principle of smooth transition between old and new medication methods. The drug catalog should reflect the changes in employees' drug needs in recent years, and the drug selection scope is determined based on the conditions for entering the scope of public-funded and labor insurance medical reimbursement in most provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities.
5. Adhere to the principles of scientificity, impartiality and authority. In the process of formulating the National Basic Medical Insurance Drug Catalog, we have always respected experts and science, adhered to openness, fairness, and fairness, and organized clinical medical experts at different levels nationwide to select drugs to ensure the use of drugs for basic medical insurance. scientific and extensive. The promulgation of the "National Basic Medical Insurance Drug Catalog" standardizes the management of the scope of medicines used in basic medical insurance, and the "Interim Measures for the Management of the Drug Scope of Basic Medical Insurance for Urban Employees" was promulgated at the same time to ensure the basic medical needs of employees. Employees who participate in basic medical insurance can be reimbursed for the use of Category A and B drugs on the catalog and traditional Chinese medicine pieces outside the catalog according to the proportion stipulated by each locality.
The catalog promulgated this time includes three parts: Western medicines, Chinese patent medicines (including ethnic medicines) and Chinese medicine pieces. Among them, there are 913 varieties of Western medicines, 575 varieties of Chinese patent medicines, and 47 varieties of ethnic medicines. Traditional Chinese medicine pieces include 28 types of completely self-financed pieces and 1 category (excluding chicken gizzards, various animal organs, fetuses, whips, and tails). , tendons, bones), and 101 kinds of decoction pieces at your own expense when used alone. Western medicines and Chinese patent medicines are divided into two categories: A and B. There are 327 Category A western medicines and 135 Chinese patent medicines; there are 586 Category B western medicines and 440 Chinese patent medicines. Category A drugs are implemented uniformly across the country and cannot be changed by various regions; each province, autonomous region, or city has a 15% right to adjust Category B drugs. The general price of Class B drugs is higher than that of Class A drugs, and the proportion of personal payment is also higher than that of Class A drugs. The specific payment standards are set by each coordinating region.
National Basic Medical Insurance Drug Catalog
1. Western Medicine Section
1 Antimicrobial Drugs
1.1 Antibiotic Anti-infective Drugs
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1.2 Synthetic antibacterial drugs
1.3 Others
1.4 Antimycobacterial drugs
1.5 Antifungal drugs
1.6 Antiviral drugs
2 Antiparasitic drugs
2.1 Antitrematozoa drugs
2.2 Antimalarial drugs
2.3 Anthelmintic drugs Insecticides
2.4 Anti-filariasis and anti-Kala-azar drugs
2.5 Anti-amoebiasis and anti-trichomoniasis drugs
3 Antipyretic and analgesic and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory analgesics
3.1 Antipyretic analgesics and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory analgesics
3.2 Anti-gout drugs
4 Anesthesia Medication
4.1 General anesthetics
4.2 Local anesthetics
4.3 Analgesics
4.4 Anesthetic auxiliary drugs
< p>5 Medications for vitamin and mineral deficiencies6 Nutritional therapy drugs
7 Hormones and drugs for regulating endocrine function
7.1 Hypothalamic pituitary hormones and their similar Substances
7.2 Adrenocortical hormone drugs
7.3 Androgen and anabolic hormone drugs
7.4 Estrogen and progesterone drugs
7.5 Pancreatin and other drugs that affect blood sugar
7.6 Thyroid hormones and antithyroid drugs
7.7 Parathyroid and calcium metabolism regulating drugs
7.8 Others
p>8 Drugs that regulate immune function
9 Anti-tumor drugs
9.1 Alkylating agent anti-tumor drugs
9.2 Anti-metabolite anti-tumor drugs< /p>
9.3 Antibiotic antitumor drugs
9.4 Natural antitumor drugs
9.5 Hormone antitumor drugs
9.6 Others
9.7 Anti-tumor auxiliary drugs
10 Anti-allergic drugs
11 Nervous system drugs
11.1 Anti-tremor paralysis drugs
11.2 Anti-myasthenia gravis drugs
11.3 Anti-epileptic drugs
11.4 Medications for cerebrovascular diseases
11.5 Central stimulants
11.6 Sedation Hypnotics
11.7 Others
12 Medications for treating mental disorders
12.1 Antipsychotics
12.2 Anti-anxiety drugs
< p>12.3 Antidepressants12.4 Antimanic drugs
13 Respiratory drugs
13.1 Expectorants
13.2 Antitussives Drugs
13.3 Antiasthmatic drugs
14 Digestive system drugs
14.1 Antacids and anti-ulcer drugs
14.2 Digestive drugs
14.3 Gastrointestinal antispasmodic and gastric motility drugs
14.4 Laxatives and antidiarrheal drugs
14.5 Auxiliary drugs for liver and biliary diseases
14.6 Others
15 Circulatory system drugs
15.1 Cardiotonic drugs
15.2 Antiarrhythmic drugs
15.3 Drugs for preventing and treating angina pectoris
15.4 Antihypertensive drugs
15.5 Anti-shock vasoactive drugs
15.6 Hypolipidemic drugs
15.7 Others
16 Urinary system medications
16.1 Diuretics
16.2 Prostate disease medications
16.3 Others
17 Blood system medications
17.1 Hemostatic drugs
17.2 Anticoagulants and thrombolytic drugs
17.3 Blood volume expanders
17.4 Anti-anemia drugs
17.5 liters of leukocyte drugs
17.6 Antiplatelet drugs
18 Drugs for regulating water, electrolytes and acid-base balance
19 Specialty drugs
19.1 Dermatological drugs
19.2 Ophthalmic drugs
19.3 Otorhinolaryngological drugs
19.4 Gynecological drugs
Obstetric drugs
19.5 Antidotes
19.6 Radioisotope drugs
20 Diagnostic drugs
20.1 Imaging diagnostic drugs
20.2 Others
21 Biological products
II. Chinese patent medicines
1 Internal medicine
1.1 Exolytics
1.2 Laxatives
1.3 Heat-clearing agents
1.4 Warming agents
1.5 Phlegm-reducing, cough-relieving and antiasthmatic agents
1.6 Astringent agent
1.7 Astringent agent
1.8 Stabilizing agent
1.9 Tranquilizing agent
1.10 Hemostatic agent
< p>1.11 Qi-regulating agent1.12 Qi-regulating agent
1.13 Anti-inflammatory agent
1.14 Wind-controlling agent
1.15 Dampness-removing agent< /p>
1.16 Others
2 Surgical medication
2.1 Heat-clearing agent
2.2 Warming and qi-activating agent
3 Gynecology Medication
3.1 Blood-regulating agent
3.2 Heat-clearing agent
3.3 Stabilizing agent
4 Ophthalmic medication
4.1 Heat-clearing agents
4.2 Stabilizing agents
5 Otorhinolaryngology drugs
5.1 Ear diseases.
5.2 Rhinopathies
< p>5.3 Throat diseases6 Orthopedics and Traumatology Medications
6.1 Agents for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis
6.2 Agents for promoting blood circulation and unblocking collaterals
6.3 Supplements Liver and kidney medicines
7 Dermatological medicines
8 Ethnic medicines
3. Traditional Chinese medicine pieces
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