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Healthcare Systems. Ronald F. White, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy College of Mount St. Joseph. National Health Care Systems. What is the “Ideal National Health Care System?” UNIVERSAL ACCESS A formal principle or abstraction Access to what? Wants v. Needs QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE
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Healthcare Systems Ronald F. White, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy College of Mount St. Joseph
National Health Care Systems • What is the “Ideal National Health Care System?” • UNIVERSAL ACCESS • A formal principle or abstraction • Access to what? • Wants v. Needs • QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE • What is “Good Health Care?” • Individual v. Collective Measures • Quality of what? • Health care professionals, hospitals, drugs, biomedical technologies, laboratories, research institutions, medical schools, health insurance • Quality Sensitivity • Availability of qualitative information • Ability to act on qualitative information • Quality as Comprehensiveness • Number of products and services available • Health Care Needs v. Wants • Scientific Medicine • Regulation of Research • AFFORDABLE COST • What is “Affordable Health Care” • How much does it cost? • How much is too much? • Who Benefits and Who Pays the Cost?
The U.S. Health Care System • ACCESS • In 2005, the Census Bureau reported that at least 44.8 million Americans were without health insurance coverage. • By 2006, that number rose to 47 million: a 15% increase in the number of uninsured. • Since, 2000 the number of uninsured Americans has grown by 8.6 million: an increase of about 22 percent. (Census Bureau 18). • The largest segments of uninsured are employed, young adults 19-29 and older adults 45-64. (Census Bureau, 21) • The uninsured rate among young adults, signals a corresponding rise in the number of uninsured young children. • QUALITY • Global Measurement of Quality • Life Expectancy : As of 2006 U.S. Ranks 38th COMPARED TO: 1. Japan (82.6), 2. Hong Kong (82.6), 3. Iceland (81.8) • Infant Mortality: As of 2006 U.S. ranks 32nd (6.3) COMPARED TO: 1. Iceland (2.9), 2. Singapore (2.9) , Japan (3.2) • Hamilton County, Ohio 13.9 (More than twice the National Average) • Medical Mistakes • Comprehensiveness • Number and Quality of Products and Services • Heroic Medicine and Enhancement • Quality of Insurance Products • COST • In 2007, the Kaiser Family Foundation reported that the cost of providing health care in the United States has grown from 7.2% of the nation’s economy in 1970 (or $356 per person per year), to about 16% in 2005 (or $6,500 per person). • This is nearly twice the cost of providing care in Canada ($3,161), France ($3,191.) and Australia ($3,128.); and more twice as much as Japan ($2,358) and the United Kingdom ($2,560.).
The Basic Problem • Economic Reality • Cost of Healthcare- • Healthcare as Social Construction • What is disease? • Socialized Medicine Inefficiencies • Reliance on experts • Determination of a social minimum: what is basic healthcare? • Wants become needs • Moral Hazard-Overuse of the System • Weak on Research- • Free Riders on U.S. Research • Market-Based Inefficiencies • Imperfect Information- ”learned intermediaries” • Imperfect Freedom- • Imperfect Competition- • Free Riders- no health insurance • Emphasis on Disease rather than health • Weak on preventative medicine
Real World Systems • Real World Systems: Mixed Systems • Emphasize Comprehensiveness (Free Market) • Healthcare is a Business: Free Market • Maximize Private Enterprise • Minimize Public Enterprise • Maximize Private Charity • Maximize Innovation • Maximize Competition- • Regulate Monopolies: • Natural Monopolies • Artificial Monopolies • Licensure, Patents, etc • Emphasize Universality (Socialized Medicine) • Healthcare is a Public Good • Marxism • Welfare Liberalism • Social Minimum • Safety Net (needs v. wants)
William Beveridge (England) • Great Britain, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia, Cuba, and Hong Kong • Health Care financed and provided by government via taxation • No medical bills, public service • Most doctors are government employees • Most doctors are private doctors collect fees from govt. • U.S. Correlate: • Military and Veterans, Indian Health Service • Problems: High Taxation, Shortage of Specialists, Waiting Lines, Patients may not be treated if the doctor deems unimportant, Government (not price) rations health care Beveridge Model • William Beveridge (England) • Great Britain, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia, Cuba, and Hong Kong • Health Care financed and provided by government via taxation • No medical bills, public service • Most doctors are government employees • Most doctors are private doctors collect fees from govt. • U.S. Correlate: • Military and Veterans, Indian Health Service • Problems: High Taxation, Shortage of Specialists, Waiting Lines, Patients may not be treated if the doctor deems unimportant, Government (not price) rations health care
National Health Insurance Model • Canadian System • Canada, Taiwan, South Korea • Single-Payer System • Principles Governing Canadian System • Public Administration • Comprehensiveness • Universality • Portability • Accessibility • U.S. Correlate: (Medicare) • Individuals over 65 • Basic Problems: Waiting Lines, High Taxes
Bismarck Model • Germany, Japan, France, Belgium, Switzerland, Japan • Otto Von Bismarck (Germany) • Universal Coverage • Providers and Payers are Private • Insurance Financed by Employers and Employees • Non-Profit Sickness Insurance Funds • Individual and Employer Mandates • Price controls on medical services • U.S. Correlate: Four-Party System • Most working individuals under 65 • Basic Problems: • Sickness Funds run out of money • Doctors not highly compensated • Unemployment • Perverse Incentives: Job-Lock, Job-Flight
Out-of-Pocket System • Countries without any Organized Health Care System • Somalia, Afghanistan etc. • Products and Services not covered by Countries with Health Care Systems. • Treatments that address wants (elective v. necessary treatments) • Cosmetic surgery, Sex change, weight reduction surgery etc. • Treatments with marginal cost-benefit ratios • Joint replacement surgery • Dental care, psychiatric care, pharmaceuticals • Illegal Treatments on the black market (Rhino Horn etc.) • The United States • Unemployed or Underemployed • Uninsured with pre-existing conditions • Exceed Lifetime Insurance Limits • Under-Insured • Contractual Exclusions • Problems: Access to health care by the poor, inequality of quality (the rich get better care).
Health Care Systems in the United States • Decentralized Mixed System Based on Groups • Four-Party System (workers) • Bismarck Model • Multiple Systems • Federal Employees Health Benefit Program (employees of government) • Medicare (elderly) • Beveridge Model • Medicaid (poor) • National Health Insurance Model • Veteran’s Medicine (veterans) • Beveridge Model • State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) • National Health Insurance Model • Reauthorized in 2009 • Cobra Consolidated Budget Reconciliation Act COBRA (unemployed)
Questions for Discussion • Why are all national health care systems always subject to “reform?” • Are comparisons between the U.S. health care systems and European systems fair? • Why do all health care systems struggle with the conflict between “market justice” and “social justice?”