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Health Economics & Policy 2 nd Edition James W. Henderson Chapter 15 Medical Care Systems Worldwide Copyright 2002, South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, James W. Henderson, Health Economics and Policy, 2e
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International Comparisons l Key statistics l Health care spending l Medical outcomes
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Key Statistics
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Health Outcomes
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Canada l Evolution of the Canadian system l Single-payer concept l Cost-control measures –Binding fee schedules –Global budgets for hospitals –Regionalization of high-tech services l Canada’s safety valve—private travel health insurance
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Japan l Evolution of the Japanese system l National health insurance l Cost-control measures –Uniform fee schedules –Service distortions l Japan’s safety valve—”gifts of appreciation” to secure treatment
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Germany l Evolution of the German system l Sickness fund concept l Cost-control measures –Institutional framework –Linking health care spending to income –Binding fee schedules –System-wide global budgets l Germany’s safety valve—private health insurance for upper income population
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France l Evolution of the French system l System-wide goals –Spirit of egalitarianism—solidarity –Respect for individual freedom—liberty –Minimal state intervention—laissez faire l Cost-control measures –Binding fee schedules –Global budgeting restricting adoption of high-tech services l France’s safety valve—supplementary private insurance
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United Kingdom l Evolution of the National Health Service l Single-payer concept in a socialized system l Cost-control measures –Binding fee schedules –Hospital trusts –PCG budgetholders l British safety valve—private health insurance for wait-listed patients
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Lessons From Europe l Germany –System of comprehensive, universal coverage is expensive –Cost control that includes binding fee schedules must also control utilization l France –Promoting system-wide goals requires tradeoffs –Strict budget controls leads to lower investment l United Kingdom –Strong primary care covers all sorts of ills –Strict cost controls can lead to long waiting lists
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Summary and Conclusions l National health insurance does not guarantee public satisfaction l Health care provided at zero cost offers no incentive to limit demand l Eliminating financial barriers to care does not insure equal access to care or eliminate health differences across subgroups l If prices are not used to allocate scarce resources, something else must do so. In health care it is often waiting lists and limited access to technology l Safety valves are critical
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Public Opinion Polls
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