Supplementary Health Insurance and Regulation of Healthcare Systems

Author(s):  
Brigitte Dormont

Most developed nations provide generous coverage of care services, using either a tax financed healthcare system or social health insurance. Such systems pursue efficiency and equity in care provision. Efficiency means that expenditures are minimized for a given level of care services. Equity means that individuals with equal needs have equal access to the benefit package. In order to limit expenditures, social health insurance systems explicitly limit their benefit package. Moreover, most such systems have introduced cost sharing so that beneficiaries bear some cost when using care services. These limits on coverage create room for private insurance that complements or supplements social health insurance. Everywhere, social health insurance coexists along with voluntarily purchased supplementary private insurance. While the latter generally covers a small portion of health expenditures, it can interfere with the functioning of social health insurance. Supplementary health insurance can be detrimental to efficiency through several mechanisms. It limits competition in managed competition settings. It favors excessive care consumption through coverage of cost sharing and of services that are complementary to those included in social insurance benefits. It can also hinder achievement of the equity goals inherent to social insurance. Supplementary insurance creates inequality in access to services included in the social benefits package. Individuals with high incomes are more likely to buy supplementary insurance, and the additional care consumption resulting from better coverage creates additional costs that are borne by social health insurance. In addition, there are other anti-redistributive mechanisms from high to low risks. Social health insurance should be designed, not as an isolated institution, but with an awareness of the existence—and the possible expansion—of supplementary health insurance.

2013 ◽  
Vol 05 (02) ◽  
pp. 55-71
Author(s):  
Jiwei QIAN

Ninety-five per cent (or 1.2 billion) of China's population is covered by social health insurance. In 2011, various social insurance plans took up 25% of total health expenditure. Issues to be addressed for social health insurance include shallow financial coverage, high surpluses, opportunistic behaviours and an underdeveloped private insurance sector. The incentive of social insurers is the key to understanding these issues and for future policy implementation


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Choirun Nisa' ◽  
Intan Nina Sari

Background: Health insurance is a right for all Indonesian citizens. To provide this, the Indonesian government must provide health services that are equitable, fair, and affordable for all levels of society. Before National Health Insurance (JKN) was established, the government launched Social Insurance for Maternity Care or Jaminan Persalinan (Jampersal) as a special health facility for pre-pregnant to post-partum mothers. The JKN program will run well if it is accompanied with good health service literacy of the community.Aims: This study aims to analyze the relationship of social health insurance literacy with the utilization of Jampersal and predict the response towards JKN utilization based on Jampersal mothers. These responses can be used as an input for JKN improvement.Methods: This research is a descriptive study that focuses on the experience of the subjects. The study does so by analyzing Jampersal users’ response and utilizing it for the improvement of JKN. The respondents of this study are Jampersal and non-Jampersal mothers consisting of 75 pregnant and post-partum mothers.Results: The results show that the number of Jampersal users (47%) were less than non Jampersal (53%) with a ratio of 2:3. In addition, literacy about Jampersal of Jampersal mothers' was higher (28 out of 30 people - 93.33%) compared to non Jampersal mothers (29 out of 45 people - 64.44%).Conclusions: This study concludes that there is a lack of promotion of government programs, especially social health insurance. What needs to be done to improve participation and use of social health insurance is to encourage primary healthcare centers to promote the programs. Intervention policy, especially by educating the communities, is necessary for the improvement of JKN literacy.                                                                                                                                                          Keywords: Literacy, Participation, Social health insurance.


2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 665-677
Author(s):  
Claus Wendt

Abstract This article discusses recent developments in and new principles of European social health insurance (SHI). It analyses how privatization policies and competition have altered social insurance and whether financial difficulties are caused by social insurance features not evident in other types of health care systems. There is little if any evidence that SHI causes higher cost increases than other types of systems. The comparison of five European SHI systems demonstrates that despite cost containment policies these countries do not experience a trust crisis in health care or loss in support among the public. The author shows that SHI has moved toward universal health care and that the traditional values of solidarity and social security have even been strengthened over the past decades.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Abraham Isiaka Jimmy ◽  
Kwabena Anarfi Boateng ◽  
Peter Twum ◽  
Deborah Larbie ◽  
Abdul Bangura ◽  
...  

Background. The government of Sierra Leone introduced social health insurance (SHI) scheme to provide universal health coverage to people. This study was carried out to assess the population characteristics and their implications on the benefit basket of the proposed national health insurance scheme. Methods. A cross-sectional study design was employed in six selected districts in Sierra Leone. Quantitative data were collected for this study through the use of semistructured questionnaires with a sample of 1,185 respondents. Data were analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics. Statistical analysis was run at 5% significant level using Stata 14.0 software. Results. The study found that most (83.54%) of the respondents affirmed that children below 18 years should be excluded from premium payments and as high as 71.65% also stated that pregnant women should be excluded as well. The majority, 63.69%, of the respondents want lactating mothers to be excluded from premium payments. Also, 79.87% of respondents wanted mentally challenged persons not to pay premium, while a significant proportion (84.26%) of respondents further affirmed that the aged (above 70 yrs) should also be excluded from premium payment. Most household heads (89.71%) preferred the accreditation of public health facilities. Regarding the level at which healthcare services should be covered by the scheme, 61.45% preferred the primary care services, 89% mentioned secondary care services, and 98.93% affirmed the provision of tertiary care under the scheme. As for the type of care that should be covered by the scheme, 98.66% and 99.73% affirmed outpatient and inpatient care, respectively. Conclusion. From the findings on population characteristics and their implications on the benefit basket for the proposed nation social health in Sierra Leone, most of the household heads want exemptions from paying premium for a section of the population. This provides a clear insight for policy makers into the formulation of the benefit basket.


2021 ◽  
pp. 767-787
Author(s):  
Tamara Popic

This chapter offers an in-depth look at health politics and the health system in Slovakia based on compulsory social health insurance. It traces the development of the Slovak healthcare system, characterized by the shift from a social health insurance model to a Semashko model of health provision under communism. Slovak post-communist health politics has been marked by strong left–right political conflict and institutional barriers to reforms. Nevertheless, health policy in Slovakia displays a dramatic shift to a market-oriented healthcare provision based on user fees and managed competition, introduced in 2003 and 2004. Attempts to reverse market-oriented reforms were partially successful and have involved supranational and international authorities of the European Commission and of the International Court of Arbitration. As outlined in the chapter, some of the main issues facing the Slovak healthcare system have been overcapacity in the hospital sector, a malfunctioning referral system, and corruption.


2021 ◽  
pp. 520-557
Author(s):  
Karen M. Anderson ◽  
Ruud J. Van Druenen

This chapter provides an extended look at health politics and the mandated health insurance system in the Netherlands. It traces the historical development of the Dutch healthcare system, analyzing the emergence of a bifurcated public–private system and its replacement with mandated private insurance in 2006. The Dutch case is thus notable for large-scale privatization accompanied by expanding state regulation of private actors. Dramatic shifts in the party system since the 1980s shaped reform processes as the center-left consensus in favor of social health insurance and redistributive financing was replaced by center-right consensus supporting managed competition among private insurers. Reforms adopted since 2005 have aimed to control costs without sacrificing quality, largely by strengthening managed competition and the regulation underpinning it.


2021 ◽  
pp. 958-966
Author(s):  
Arta Uka

This chapter offers an in-depth look at health politics and the tax-financed health system in Kosovo, a system which is in a process of transition towards social health insurance. It traces the development of Kosovo’s healthcare system, characterized by the establishment of a decentralized free-for-all-at-point-of-delivery health system during communism. After the end of the Kosovo War in 1999, Kosovo started actively seeking independence. Until the declaration of independence in 2008, politics in the country was mainly focused on the state-building process, while health policy was not a priority. Although facilitated by international organizations, legislation for establishing a social health insurance has been passed, the social health insurance system has not been implemented yet. Thus, healthcare services still remain financed by state and municipal budgets, medical professionals are public employees, and the private sector is not integrated into the public insurance system. Key healthcare issues have been high out-of-pocket payments, mainly for pharmaceuticals and private services, inequalities in health access, and high unemployment rates, which are likely to undermine the collection of social insurance contributions in the future.


2021 ◽  
pp. 788-808
Author(s):  
Tamara Popic

This chapter offers an in-depth look at health politics and the universal health system in Slovenia based on compulsory social health insurance. It traces the development of the Slovenian healthcare system from the first health insurance schemes to the more established insurance system with universal coverage and focus on social medicine under communism. Since its independence in 1992, Slovenian politics has been marked by a pragmatic model of party competition with an important role in healthcare policymaking played by neo-corporatist structures. The major post-communist reform was the introduction of complementary private health insurance in 1993, which covers the majority of the population. Several unsuccessful reform proposals sought the abolition of complementary private insurance, the fairness of which remains the most controversial question regarding the system. Other healthcare issues outlined in the chapter include large hospital debt and uneven distribution of primary care physicians.


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