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Future Health Summit Dublin, May 27, 2016 Prof. Arne Björnberg, PhD Ireland In the Euro Health Consumer Index 2015.

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Presentation on theme: "Future Health Summit Dublin, May 27, 2016 Prof. Arne Björnberg, PhD Ireland In the Euro Health Consumer Index 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 Future Health Summit Dublin, May 27, 2016 Prof. Arne Björnberg, PhD info@healthpowerhouse.com Ireland In the Euro Health Consumer Index 2015

2 The Big Problem Almost all European public healthcare suffers from the same endemic condition: “MD” This is not to suggest that the basic problem is Medical Doctors – “MD” stands for “Management Deficiency” If Mr. O’Leary of Ryanair, or Mr. Kamprad of IKEA, would learn in detail how the typical European big hospital is being run, they would probably need to be admitted acutely!

3 Comparing healthcare systems performance in 35 countries from a consumer/patient view. Since 2004, more than 40 index editions, available for free. Index projects financed through unconditional development grants, similar to medical faculty sponsored research. About Health Consumer Powerhouse Europe Euro Health Consumer Index 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 Euro Consumer Heart Index2008, 2016 Euro Diabetes Care Index 2008, 2014 Euro HIV Index2009 Euro Patient Empowerment Index2009 Nordic COPD Index2010 Tobacco Harm Prevention Index2011 Euro Headache Index2011 Euro Hepatitis Index2012 Euro Vision Scorecard2013 Euro Pancreatic Cancer Index2014 Sweden, others Health Consumer IndexSweden 2004, 2005, 2006 Diabetes Care IndexSweden 2006, 2007, 2008 Breast Cancer IndexSweden 2006 Vaccination IndexSweden 2007, 2008 Renal Care IndexSweden 2007, 2008 Smoke Cessation IndexSweden 2008 COPD IndexSweden 2009, Nordic 2010 Advanced Home Care IndexSweden 2010 Euro-Canada Health Consumer Index Canada 2008, 2009 Provincial Health Consumer IndexCanada 2008, 2009, 2010 All Hospitals IndexSweden 2011

4 EHCI 2015 Important trends Treatment results in European healthcare keep improving essentially everywhere! Wealthy countries do better in the EHCI – the “equity gap” more obvious than in previous years Closing slightly in 2015? Savings on pharmaceuticals the most obvious effect of austerity Some patterns remarkably stable over time – waiting lists a mental condition? Accessibility has no correlation with finances, mainly because operating a healthcare system without waiting lists is inherently cheaper than having them! “Big Beveridge” have problems delivering!

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6 Sub-disciplineWeight (points out of 1000 for full score) Doing well Patient rights, information and e- Health 150 Netherlands, Norway, FYR Macedonia, Iceland Waiting times / Access 225 Belgium, Switzerland, Czech Republic, FYR Macedonia Outcomes 250 Netherlands, Norway, Iceland, Switzerland, Finland, Sweden Range & Reach of services provided 150 Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Norway Prevention 125 Norway, Finland, Germany, Iceland, UK, FYR Macedonia Pharmaceuticals deployment 100 Finland, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands EHCI 2015 sub-disciplines A total of 48 indicators in six sub-disciplines And we have really tried to be inventive and make the Index more challenging, but there is no stopping The Netherlands!

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8 What can Europe learn from The Netherlands? ”Chaos” systems, where patients can choose where to seek care, do better than ”planned” systems; but ”chaos” needs to be managed, and the NL does that very well! Choice and competition! (and remember that this has to have a ”grandfather” function managing the system!)

9 So what could be the improvement potential for the European Champions? The Netherlands tops 4 sub-disciplines; some potential for improvement on Accessibility, but no country ever did that before (except The NL in 2014)!

10 Macedonia no longer winning only because of limited finances! Estonia, Czech Republic, Croatia Finland, Iceland and the NL(!) seem to give good value for money in healthcare!

11 GP gatekeeping does not contain costs!

12 ”Structural Antiquity” Index for healthcare systems

13 Savings potential if Dutch healthcare would approach the in/out-patient mix of Sweden EUR 8 billion/year? i.e.; the high Dutch costs are more due to how healthcare is operated – not due to a payment or administrative ”model”

14 Accessibility in EHCI 2015 Europe is divided into ”waiting list territory” (Red) and ”non-waiting list territory” (Green). This is independent of GDP/capita. Has improved since 2013!

15 Accessibility not really related to number of doctors!

16 Money does not necessarily buy better access to healthcare … CH BE CZMK SE IE UKPL for the rather fundamental reason that it is cheaper to operate a healthcare system without waiting lists!

17 If you spend enough time looking at this graph, you will discover that particularly countries in the top keep improving. Inequity seemed to be increasing in Europe after the financial crisis, but there are signs of a slight recovery in 2015.

18 Treatment results keep improving! The large number of Green scores is because cut-offs were kept from 2014, when several countries were below the Green cut-off.

19 Treatment results keep improving! In EHCI 2006, there were 9 Green scores, using the same cut-offs

20 Money does buy better Treatment Results

21 And yes; wealthy countries have better Outcomes – but not all! Outcomes in EHCI 2015

22 Ireland in the EHCI 2015 685 points and 21 st place Doing rather well on medical treatment results Among the bottom four on Accessibility

23 CEE abortion rates on their way down. The indicator does not reward high abortion rates! Women should have the right to abortion, but abortion as a contraceptive is not a good idea!

24 What could Ireland do to advance in the EHCI? Switch from what is basically block grant to performance- based financing Decentralize responsibility and accountability: ”We have indentified 4000 staff redundancies, but the cost of dismissing them is higher than the cost of keeping them.” What might be the real problem in that quote was that the ”we” were not the heads of clinic of Irish hospitals, but a rather small group of centrally located administrators. In a communiqué from the HSE in connection with the publication of the EHCI 2015, it was stated that the HSE and MoH are working on reducing the wait for a specialist appointment to <18 months? Misprint? Should be weeks? If not, even reaching the target would mean the worst accessibílity in Europe!

25 THANK YOU - SEE IT ALL ON www.healthpowerhouse.com

26 MORE SLIDES

27 Sometimes money buys worse healthcare Clinic dialysis is over-remunerated, and home dialysis is under-remunerated?

28 Sometimes money buys even worse healthcare! Are there other reasons for the low German transplant rate than the profitability of clinic dialysis?

29 An example of a LAP Indicator; ”Level of Attention to the Problem”. Wealthy countries can afford admitting patients on weaker indications, but there are deviations! Greek hospitals have press gangs roaming city streets?

30 Greeks can somehow carry on spending on drugs and hospital admissions There is no evidence which supports that public health benefits from dispensing drugs to deceased patients

31 Restrictivity with new drugs

32 The 2013 indicator on use of antibiotics The 2013 indicator on use of antibiotics

33 The 2014 indicator on use of antibiotics (WHO report) – who do we trust?

34 The 2015 indicator on use of antibiotics: ECDC data. Who do we trust?

35 New in EHCI 2015 report: Regional variations within countries The 4 countries of the United Kingdom have separate NHS’s The regions of Italy all report to the same Ministry of Health

36 England and Scotland have separate National Health Services!!! Scotland has 10 % higher healthcare spend per capita Could be fair; the public health situation is more troublesome in Scotland NE England, with similar public health situation, has now also been given 10% more money! The two systems are basically the same measured on a scale intended for 36 European countries! Scotland 710 – England 718 (2014)! Scotland sadly not providing the open hospital results data of NHS Choices There is scant evidence for having separate sets of administrators making a difference at all for anything!

37 England and Scotland are very close on most measurements The four countries of the UK might have separate NHS administrations, but there still is one British Medical Association!

38 Italy has the biggest economic difference between regions of any one country: Lombardy has 3 times the GDP/capita of Calabria Much larger variation between regions than in the UK Having, on paper, one healthcare system does not create equity! 30-day case fatality rates of Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI), broken down by LHA. Similar patterns are seen in other indicators of the quality of acute hospital care. Thirty-day mortality after a stroke varies from ~7% in Bolzano to almost 20% in Molise.

39 ”Bismarck Beats Beveridge” Bismarck systems dominate the top of EHCI ranking Beveridge systems offer conflicts between loyalty to citizens and loyalty to healthcare system/organisation (“politician home town job preservation”) lack of business acumen in Beveridge systems; efficiency gains and cutbacks frequently not differentiated! small Beveridge systems (the Nordic countries) can compete “Chaos” systems do better than centrally planned 100’s of thousands of professionals take better decisions and drive development better than central bodies incentives driving quality and productivity are essential!

40 ”The verdict of the people on the medical profession. Swedes are less satisfied with attitudes and communication skills of doctors, says international comparison. Norway and Sweden bottom of 11 countries compared.” (Dagens Medicin 2012-02-29) The cherished notion that ”In Sweden, we provide holistic medicine – in contrast to ’assembly line medicine’ down on the Continent ” lacks evidence!.

41 Websites with comprehensive information about all registered pharmaceuticals 2013 (OTC and Rx) Austria: www.austriacodex.at/avmain/ http://pharmaweb.ages.at/index.jsf www.austriacodex.at/avmain/http://pharmaweb.ages.at/index.jsf Belgium: http://www.bcfi.be/, www.pharma.be http://www.bcfi.be/ Croatia: http://www.almp.hr/?ln=hr&w=lijekovi http://www.almp.hr/?ln=hr&w=lijekovi Czech Republic: www.zdravotnickenoviny.cz/scripts/modules/catalogue/search.php?catalogueID=2 www.zdravotnickenoviny.cz/scripts/modules/catalogue/search.php?catalogueID=2 Denmark: http://medicin.dk/http://medicin.dk/ Estonia: www.raviminfo.eewww.raviminfo.ee Finland: www.fimea.fi/lakemedel/produktresumeer/humpl www.fimea.fi/lakemedel/produktresumeer/humpl France: www.doctissimo.fr Germany: www.onmeda.de Greece: www.galinos.gr/web/drugs/main/lists Hungary: www.ogyi.hu/drug_database/www.ogyi.hu/drug_database/ Ireland: www.medicines.iewww.medicines.ie Italy: www.prontuariofarmaci.com www.prontuariofarmaci.com Latvia: http://www.zva.gov.lv/index.php?id=375&sa=375&top=334 http://www.zva.gov.lv/index.php?id=375&sa=375&top=334 Lithuania: www.vaistai.ltwww.vaistai.lt Malta: http://medicinesauthority.gov.mt/products/search.htm http://medicinesauthority.gov.mt/products/search.htm Netherlands: www.cbg-meb.nl/CBG/en/human-medicines/geneesmiddeleninformatiebank/default.htm www.cbg-meb.nl/CBG/en/human-medicines/geneesmiddeleninformatiebank/default.htm Norway: www.legemiddelverket.no/custom/Preparatsok/prepSearch____80333.aspx?filterBy=CopyToConsumer www.legemiddelverket.no/custom/Preparatsok/prepSearch____80333.aspx?filterBy=CopyToConsumer Portugal: www.infarmed.pt/infomed/inicio.phpwww.infarmed.pt/infomed/inicio.php Romania: www.anm.ro/en/html/pharmacopoeia.htmlwww.anm.ro/en/html/pharmacopoeia.html Slovakia: www.liekinfo.skwww.liekinfo.sk Slovenia: www.zdravila.netwww.zdravila.net Sweden: www.fass.sewww.fass.se Switzerland: www.kompendium.chwww.kompendium.ch U.K.: http://emc.medicines.org.uk/http://emc.medicines.org.uk/

42 Why do we not see clearer traces of the financial crisis? Healthcare traditionally weak at measuring output/outcomes. “The good old days that never were” Underlying improvement forces are very strong!


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