{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Reflection on 30 years of Taiwanese national health insurance: Analysis of Taiwanese health system progress, challenges, and opportunities. {Author}: Tsuei SH; {Journal}: J Formos Med Assoc {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jul 31 {Factor}: 3.871 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.jfma.2024.07.030 {Abstract}: On the eve of Taiwan's National Health Insurance's 30th birthday, this study reviews the policy and performance trajectory of the Taiwanese health system. Taiwan has controlled their health spending well and grown increasingly reliant on private financing. The floating-point global budget payment preferentially rewards outpatient-based services, but this has not affected the hospital-centric market composition, which persists despite several primary-care friendly developments. The outcomes suggest improving health care workforce and resource availability, good patient-centredness, respectable technical efficiency, and impressive patient care satisfaction. However, there are worrisome trends for financial barriers to access and allocative efficiency. Evidence on clinical quality suggests that hospitals are performing well though the primary care setting might not be. Overall, the public remains satisfied despite signs of lagging improvement in health outcomes, worsening maternal mortality rate, and persistently incomplete financial risk protection. Identifying what drives the worsening financial barriers of access and persistent financial risk is necessary for further discussions on potential financing adjustments. Improving allocative efficiency could draw on a combination of supporting the functions and quality of primary care alongside patient-oriented education and incentives. Further data on causes of slow health status improvement and rebounding maternal mortality rate is necessary.