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Master in Health Economics and Policy Ethics and Health (April 10-June 19, 2012). Marc Le Menestrel marc.lemenestrel@upf.edu Raquel Gallego raquel.gallego@uab.cat. Session 1: Why the ethics debate? Managerialism in health care systems. Managerialism and value change in the public sector.
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Master in Health Economics and PolicyEthics and Health(April 10-June 19, 2012) Marc Le Menestrel marc.lemenestrel@upf.edu Raquel Gallego raquel.gallego@uab.cat
Session 1: Why the ethics debate? Managerialism in health care systems. • Managerialism and value change in the public sector. • Health care systems reforms since the 80s. Essay: What are the main threads of the health care reforms carried out over the turn of the century? What can we learn from them? Required reading: Docteur, E.; Oxley, H. 2003. Health-care systems: Lessons from the reform experience. Paris: OECD, pp. 7-50. (http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/5/53/22364122.pdf) Optional reading: Ferlie, E. et al. 1996. (eds.)The new public management in action. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch. 1, pp.1-29. Lane, J.E. 2000. New Public Management, London: Routledge, pp.1-15 Le Grand, J.; Bartlett, W. 1993. (eds). Quasi-markets and social policy. London: Macmillan. Ch 2-4, pp. 13-92. Paris, V., M. Devaux and L. Wei. 2010, “Health Systems Institutional Characteristics: A Survey of 29 OECD Countries”, OECD Health Working Papers, No. 50, OECD Publishing. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/5kmfxfq9qbnr-en) Pollitt, C. 1993. Managerialism and the public services. Oxford: Blackwell. 2nd edition, pp.1-27.
1. Managerialism and value changein the public sector. 1.1. Managerialism as an ideology 1.2. Dualities past/present: private sector 1.3. Dualities past/present: public sector 1.4. Exercise 1.5. Doctrinal components of NPM and performance assumptions
1.1. Managerialism as an ideology (I) • Ideology: set of believes and practices assuming that (better?) management can effectively solve economic and social problems: • Route to social progress lies through the achievement of continuing increases in economically defined productivity. • Productivity increases come from the application of ever-more sophisticated (information and organization) technologies. • Application of technologies can only be achieved with a labor force ‘disciplined in accordance with the productivity ideal’. • ‘Management’ is the organizational function that plays the crucial role in achieving such productivity. Qualities and professionalism of managers are the key to business success. • To perform this crucial role managers must be granted ‘room to maneuvre’ (i.e. ‘right to manage’)… Apocalyptic role. Source: (Pollitt 1990)
1.1. Managerialism as an ideology (II) • ‘Classic’/private sector management functions: • POSDCORB: Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Directing, Co-ordinating, Reporting, Budgeting (Gulick and Urwick, 1937) • ‘Public’ management: • Expenditure planning and financial management • Procurement • Civil service and labour relations • Organization and methods • Audit and evaluation (Source: Barzelay 2001)
1.1. Managerialism as an ideology(III) 1. Set of values and ideas in relation to society: • Society should have clear objectives, motivated workers, no red-tape, freedom of transaction • Best management practices are in the private sector, not in the public sector 2. Identification of social groups: • Better off: managers, business people • Worse off: politicians, unions, professions, public sector employees
1.1. Managerialism as an ideology (IV) 3. Justifies behaviours and attitudes: • Favours autonomy, confidence, individualism, competitition • Downplays control, hierarchy, equality
1.2. Dualities past/present: Private sector Source: Hammer and Champy (1993)
1.3. Dualities past/present: Public sector (I) Soruce: Adapted from Ranson and Stewart (1994) and Metcalfe (1996)
1.2. Dualities past/present: Public sector (II) Source: Barzelay (1992)
Managerialism as an ideology: Some references… • Osborne and Gaebler (1992) Reinventing Government • Peters and Waterman (1993) In search of Excellence • Moore (1995) Creating public value.
Exercise:Management models • Are there any differences between private sector and public sector management? • Values • Aims • Decision-making (-ers) • Evaluation criteria • Property rights • Responsibility/accountability rules
Management models: Some authors… • Metcalfe • Ranson and Stewart • Flynn • Hughes • Self • Walsh • Dunleavy • Hood
2. Health care systems reforms since the 80s. 2.1. Health care markets 2.2. Health system models 2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s
2.1. Health care markets (I) • Health markets involve agency relations between: Insurers P/A Purchasers A/P Providers P/A Professionals A/P Citizens P/A
2.2. Health systems models (I) • Institutional models of health systems Reimbursement model: governmental grants to mutualities (private insurance in Switzerland and Netherlands) Public contractmodel: National health insurance (Social security contribution in France and Germany) Integrated model: National health service (pre-90s in the UK and New Zealand, and Spain)
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (I) • Problems common to all health system models • Inequity of access to services, of resource distribution, and of health states/levels between groups and regions (waiting lists…) • Increase in health expenditure without an impact on the population health state (pressures from both demand and supply sides) • Inefficiency: variability in medical activity and costs; poor coordination between health care levels (primary and specialized)
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (II) • Problems common to all health system models (cont’d): • Citizens’ dissatisfaction with impersonality and bureaucracy in service delivery • Third-partypayer (mal)functions: • Insurance/coverage: assumption of health financial risk • Access: to health services by the population • Agency: intelligent buyer on behalf of its principal
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (III) • “New public management” • Purchaser/provider separation • Disaggregation of hierarchically integrated institutional structures into quasi-autonomous and single function- organizations (regulation, financing, purchasing, provision…) • Managed competition on the basis of contracts
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (IV) • Adequacy, equity and income protection • Extensions to compulsory insurance systems (Spain, Netherlands, Ireland) • Macro-economic efficiency • Micro-economic efficiency • Convergence towards the public contract model
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (V) • Macro-economic efficiency measures: Cost containment and overall expenditure limits • Demand side: cost-sharing through • co-payment (fixed amount for a service) • co-insurance (set proportion of a service cost) • deductibles (fixed amount to be paid for a service before any benefit payment is received); • negotiation of fees for service and pharmaceutical prices; • publicly financed basic insurance
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (VI) • Macro-economic efficiency measures (cont’d): • Supply side: • Limits to global activity volume • Global budgets for physicians (Germany, Belgium) • Global budgets for hospitals (Netherlands, Belgium, France, Germany) • Capitation payment for primary care providers
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (VII) • Micro-economic efficiency measures: productivity and efficiency in the system • Switch from integrated to social insurance contract model (former Eastern Germany) • Managed competition between: • Medical professionals (Germany, United Kingdom) • Pharmaceutical products (Germany, Netherlands) • Hospitals (Germany, United Kingdom, Netherlands) • Insurers or fundholders (United Kingdom and Netherlands)
2.3. Health care reforms since the 80s (VIII) • Convergence towards the public contract model: • Reimbursement model: more strict regulations and contracts (France, Belgium) • Integrated model: introduction of contracts and disaggregation (United Kingdom) • Competition between public purchasers/insurers (United Kingdom, Netherlands) • Wider consumer choice (Germany, Belgium and Netherlands) • Mix financing systems (budget limits and fee for service) • Selective and informed purchasing rather than passive financing
Conclusions: What relevance for ethics? • Definition of actor/function: • Legal personality • Ownership • Regulation • Mecanisms of interrelation between actors/functions: • Caracteristics of the contractual relation • Regulation • Governance structure: • Hierarchy • Network • Market • Dynamic context: • Politics • Economy • Society