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Introduction to Health Systems

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Health Systems"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Health Systems
The country with the best health system is…

2 Outline What is a health system? Comparing systems around the world
The medical care triad Issues in medical systems

3 What is a health system? World Health Organization
A health system consists of all organizations, people and actions whose primary intent is to promote, restore or maintain health. This includes efforts to influence determinants of health as well as more direct health-improving activities.

4 Functions, Performance, and Impact
Does health care uphold our values as society? Both level and distribution

5 Layers of a Health System
Social interventions (education) Other health interventions (cigarettes, motor vehicle safety) Medical care

6 The Structure of a Medical System

7 The Continuum of ‘Horizontal’ and ‘Vertical’ Programs

8 An example of a vertical health programs
Supervision Program Supervision Program Supervision Program Supervision Maternal Health Child Health Tuber-culosis HIV/ AIDS Local Health Center

9 An Example of an Integrated Medical System

10 Example: India vs. the US
Public sector Hospitals (excellent academic hospitals  small community health centers) Great but hard to access Waiting lines Absenteeism Private sector Some legit but lots of untrained and unregistered practitioners Short visits and very high rate of Rx prescriptions Much of it is a waste of money United States Most of population is insured (increasingly so) Public and private (employer-based) High cost sharing inhibits use even for insured Provision is almost entirely private High quality but not coordinated Efficiency suffers

11 Health care resources: Dollars
US is 1/7 of world health spending

12 Health care resources: People
Physicians: average = 14 / 10,000 24 MDs/10,000 .1 MD/10,000

13 Nurses & midwifes per 10,000

14 The Economics of Medical Systems

15 Most Markets Buyer (patient) Seller (provider) Goods Money
QR24, Fall 2005, Lecture 10 Most Markets Buyer (patient) Seller (provider) Goods Money

16 The Medical Care Triad Insurer Patient Provider
QR24, Fall 2005, Lecture 10 The Medical Care Triad Insurer Patient Provider

17 Why Involve Insurance Risk Help with management
Medical spending is large and unpredictable Help with management Advice about what to get, where to get it, who to do it In some cases, insurance is informal (e.g., family or village)

18 Distribution of Medical Spending

19 Functions of a Medical Care System
QR24, Fall 2005, Lecture 10 Functions of a Medical Care System Insurer Revenue collection (Get money from people to insurers) Payment rules (Determine how providers are paid) Patient Provider Access rules (Determine what providers people are allowed to see.)

20 Methods of funding medical care
QR24, Fall 2009 Methods of funding medical care General taxation  Private health insurance Out-of-pocket payments Charity

21 Tax and insurance systems are fundamentally similar
$ Tax, or insurance premium net of subsidy Avg medical costs $6,000 What people earn

22 Importance of Different Financing Methods by National Income

23 Out of Pocket Spending

24 Premiums (private) and
US v. Canada Revenue collection Premiums (private) and taxes (public) Taxes Coverage ~10% uninsured Universal coverage

25 Ways to Pay Doctors (Or Anyone Else)
QR24, Fall 2005, Lecture 10 Ways to Pay Doctors (Or Anyone Else) Degree to which reimbursement reflects costs (pay for costs) (fixed pay) Fee-for- Salary Capitation Service (FFS) Salary with bonus

26 US v. Canada Revenue collection Premiums (private) and taxes (public)
Coverage ~10% uninsured Universal coverage Payment Payment per service (FFS); Salary or capitation (HMOs) Payment per service (FFS)

27 Access Rules All goods, everywhere, are rationed. The question is how, and how well is it done. Very big differences across countries. US used demand-side rationing (at least historically); other countries used supply-side rationing.

28 Access Rules “Micro” rules “Demand-side” (applies to patient)
QR24, Fall 2005, Lecture 10 Access Rules “Micro” rules “Demand-side” (applies to patient) The price the patient pays is low or high Services may be covered or not (Rx drugs) “Supply-side” (applies to MD) Need permission to see a specialist? Are physicians paid for doing things? “Macro” rules “Supply-side”: Is access to technology constrained?

29 US v. Canada Revenue collection Premiums (private) and taxes (public)
Coverage ~10% uninsured Universal coverage Payment Payment per service (FFS); Salary (HMOs) Payment per service (FFS) Access - Micro Cost sharing (FFS); Utilization review (HMO) Few - Macro Supply limits

30 Differing Perceptions of Health Systems

31 An Overall Ranking (?) – World Health Organization, 2000
France Italy San Marino Andorra Malta Singapore Spain Oman Austria Japan Denmark Dominica Costa Rica US Slovenia Cuba Brunei

32 Issues in Medical Systems

33 Health Around the World
Developing countries Developed countries Combatting infectious diseases (HIV/AIDS) Dealing with incipient chronic diseases (mental health impairment, obesity, smoking) Developing a health system Balancing cost, quality, and access The mismatch between what can be done and what should be done. Reforming the health system


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