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Health Reform Issues. TH Tulchinsky Braun SPH Jan 2004. Health for All. National political commitment Health as a government responsibility Universal access Adopt international standards Regional and social equity in access Free choice by consumers and providers
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Health Reform Issues TH Tulchinsky Braun SPH Jan 2004
Health for All • National political commitment • Health as a government responsibility • Universal access • Adopt international standards • Regional and social equity in access • Free choice by consumers and providers • Healthy life-style as national policy • Health promotion as policy • Law/regulations • Regulate consumers rights in health • Public information on health • Advocacy groups - public, professional
Financing • Financing within national means for social benefits • Adequate overall financing (>6%GNP) • Shift from supply side planning to cost per capita per output • Categorical grants to promote national objectives • Increase financing at national, state and local government levels (7-9% GNP) • Health insurance as supplement • Define "basket of services" and consumer rights • Reduce acute care beds to <3.0/1,000 • District health authorities with capitation funding
Defining National Health Targets • Define leading causes of morbidity, mortality and YPLL, hospitalization with regional analysis • Health promotion vs treatment philosophy • Prioritization for use of available resources • Use relevant international standards • Social factor analysis in health • Improve health KABP • Community attitudes to health promotion • Promote public health, nutrition, environment, • Immunization policies
Management for Cost-Effectiveness • Cost containment • Cost-effective health initiatives • Decentralized management • National policy, monitoring and standards • Information systems/monitoring • District health profiles • Increase primary care • Increase home care, long-term beds • Increase non-admission surgery, long-term care • Health information systems • Managed care and DRGs
Government - national, state and local health authorities; Employers - through negotiated heath benefits for employees; Insurers - public, not-for-profit and private for-profit; Patients, clients or consumers - as individuals or groups; Risk groups - persons with special risk factors for disease e.g age, poverty; Providers - hospitals, managed care plans, medical, dental, nursing, laboratories, others; Providers - not-for-profit provider institutions; For-profit institutions, individuals and groups; Teaching and research institutions; Participants (Stakeholders) in National Health Systems
Professional associations; Social security systems; The public; Political parties; Advocacy groups - age, disease, poverty or public interest groups; The media; Economies - national, regional and local; International health organizations and movements; Pharmaceutical and medical technology industries Participants (Stakeholders) in National Health Systems
Health System Problems: World Bank 1. Misallocation of Resources: Public money is spent on interventions of dubious cost-effectiveness, e.g. bone marrow transplants for breast cancer, while highly cost-effective interventions (TB and STD management) are neglected; 2. Inequity: Poor and rural populations receive less health care, while public monies go to urban and affluent groups who have better access to tertiary care services; 3. Inefficiency: Much waste in health care, in use of brand name drugs, inefficient use of health personnel and inappropriate utilization of hospital beds;
Typology of Financing and Administration of National Health Systems • Type • Financing Source • Administration
Institutional Care Pharmaceuticals and Vaccines Ambulatory Care Home Care Elderly Support Categorical Programs Immunization, MCH Family planning, Mental health, TB, STDs, HIV, Screening Community Health Activities Healthy communities Health promotion, risk groups, environment and occupational health, nutrition and food safety, safe water supplies, special groups Research Professional education and training Categories of Services
Classical Market Factors • Supply • Demand • Competition in cost, quality • System macro-efficiency • Vertical integration • Lateral integration • System micro-efficiency • Incentives • Disincentives • Reputation
Regulatory Factors • Regulate supply • Regulate demand – gatekeeper, user fees • Regulate price • Regulate benefits • Regulate method of payment • Health promotion issues
Health and Societal Factors • Differing population needs • Social inequities • Improve infrastructure to reduce needs • Socioeconomic improvements • Public social policies • Health as a national and local priority • Health promotion • Improve KABP (knowledge, attitudes, beliefs and practices)
System Determinants • Shift in resource allocation • Technological innovations • Substitution e.g. generic drugs • Total Quality Management • institutional and community care • New vaccines, drugs, diagnostic equipment, ORS, community health workers • Home care, generic drugs, nurse practitioners • External accreditation, internal review systems, patient choice, continuous quality improvement
Semashko National Health Systems • Former USSR and Soviet countries • Government financing • Strong central government planning and control • Financing by fixed norms per population • High ratio of hospital beds and medical staff; • Post 1990 reforms emphasize decentralization with capitation and compulsory health insurance i.e. payroll taxation
Bismarckian Health Insurance • Funded through social security e.g. Germany, Japan, France, Austria, Belgium, Switzerland, Israel • Compulsory employer-employee tax payment to Sick Funds or through Social Security • Germany - governments regulate Sick Funds which pay private services; strong Sick Fund and doctor's syndicates; • Israel's Sick Funds compete as HMOs with per capita payments for mandatory basket of services
Beveridge National Health Service • United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece • Government - taxes and revenues; UK national financing; Nordic countries combine national, regional and local taxation • Central planning, decentralized management of hospitals, GP service and public health; integrated district health systems • Capitation financing in UK with SMR modifier
Douglas national health insurance • Financed through government • Canada, Australia • Taxation based • Cost-sharing between provincial and federal governments e.g. Saskatchewan, Manitoba • Provincial government administration • Federal government regulation; • Medical services paid by fee-for-service • Hospitals on block budgets; • Reforms to regionalize and integrate services
Mixed Private/Public System • United States, Latin America (e.g Colombia), Asia (e.g Philippines) and African countries (e.g. Nigeria) • Private insurance through employment • Public insurance through Social Security for specific population groups (Medicare, Medicaid) • High percentage of uninsured • Strong government regulation (US); • Mixed private medical services, public and private hospitals, state/county preventive services; • DRG payment to hospitals, managed care; extension of Medicaid coverage
“Laws” • Sutton’s law • Capone’s law • Roemer’s law • Bunker’s law • Murphy’s law
Basic issues • Universality • Equity • Comprehensiveness • Accessibility • Portability • Tax (social security) based • Quality
A Comprehensive Health Services Continuum: Manitoba, Canada Promotion Healthy Public Policy Prevention Promotion Protection Hospitals Palliation Support Services To Seniors Community Health Centres Outpatient Ambulatory Care Urban Community Rural Community Palliation Tertiary Community Oriented Services Home Care Extended Treatment & Long Term Care Rehabilitation
Decentralization • Transfer of responsibility to lower level of gov’t • Transfer of funds to provide care • Monitoring of stndards
Devolution • Transfer of gov’tal responsibility to non-gov’t organization • Universities • Colleges of physicians etc • Accreditation by consortium of organizations e.g. medical, nursing etc.
Regionalization • Decentralization • Integration of related services • Vertical integration of acute care with long term care • Organizational and financial linkages
Prospective Payments Systems • Payment before service • Predictable • Limits liability • Defines responsibility • Risk sharing • Capitation • DRGs
Balance of Services • Health promotion to terminal care • Spectrum of services • Care depends on person or patient needs
Cost Restraint • Gate keeper function • Downsize-Upgrade • Basket of services • Limit liability • Patient participation – user fees • Private insurance
Models of Care • Private practice • Charity services • Guilds and friendly societies • NHS • Soviet model • Sick Funds • Prepaid group practice • Health maintenance organizations
Health for All • Basic primary care for all – gov’t based • Immunization • MCH • Environmental health • Nutrition • Secondary and tertiary care via health insurance • Contradictions and imperfect models
Trends • Down-size hospital sector • Develop PHC • Linkage between insurance and service • Define basket of services • Generic drugs • Clinical guidelines • Technology assessment
Health Reforms • Continuous or periodic process • Economic and political factors • Epidemiologic factors • Public consciousness and knowledge
PH Professional Roles • Provide evidence • Regional variations • Inequities – socioeconomic, ethnic, regional, urban-rural • Identify new interactions, risk factors, diseases
Motivation/Advocacy • Whistle blowing • Advocacy • Investigation • Media • Professional bodies • Publication
Famous last words • IBM boss - will only need 5 computers world wide • Music teacher – Beethoven is hopeless as a composer • Decca records – The Beatles will never make it • Tom Lehrer – when Mozart was my age he had been dead for 10 years
Intellectual Challenges • “Think global, act local” • “Think outside of the box” • Think
Motivation • Commitment • Responsibility – moral, professional • Professionalism • Stay the course • Self esteem • Recognition • Isolation