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Other universal health care systems around the world
Source: http://www.house.gov/conyers/news_hr676_8.htm
1. In a single-payer national health insurance
system, such as in
Canada
,
Denmark
,
Norway
, and
Sweden
, health insurance is publicly administered and most physicians are in private
practice. Regional governments, such as the 12 Provinces in
Canada
, administer the health insurance program for everyone in that region. In single
payer insurance systems, government is involved in the financing of health care.
2.
Great Britain
and
Spain
are among the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
countries with national health services, in which salaried physicians
predominate and hospitals are publicly owned and operated. A national health
service is also sometimes called "socialized medicine" because the
government in responsible for managing the financing and delivery of health
care. Cuba (not in the OECD) has "socialized medicine" and not only
receives very high ratings for providing care on a limited budget (much higher
than Jamaica, Haiti, Central America, etc.) but also sends physicians to work in
Honduras, El Salvador, and other countries that face physician shortages.
3. A third model of universal health care is a highly regulated,
universal, multi-payer health insurance system. This model is in place in
countries like
Germany
,
France
, and
Japan
, which have universal health insurance via non-profit "sickness
funds" (
Germany
) or "mutuales" (
France
). The sickness funds pay physicians and hospitals uniform rates that are
negotiated annually (also known as an all-payer system).
Note - Although often suggested as a "more politically
feasible" model for the
U.S.
, the non-profit, charitable sickness funds/mutuales are completely different
from our for-profit, investor-owned insurance companies. There is no resemblance
between an
Aetna
or Humana and a sickness fund or mutuale. Mutuales do not perform risk rating
(i.e. setting rates based on the age, sex, or health status of the person or
group) and "cherry-picking," (i.e. excluding people who have
pre-existing conditions or are aged, they do not seek to make profits for
investors, they are not traded on the stock market, they do not individually
contract with doctors and hospitals, and they share funds at the end of the year
if one of the funds has lost money. Recent reforms in
Germany
to make the sickness funds "compete" has mostly resulted in a wave of
mergers and higher administrative costs (
Germany
's system has the highest administrative costs in all of
Europe
).
International evidence is so strongly in favor of the first model, single payer
national health insurance, that the most recent four countries to adopt new
programs have adopted single payer. These are
Germany
and
Japan
's new long-term care programs (adopted in the 1990's), and acute care programs
in
Taiwan
(1996)and
Thailand
.
The OECD regularly publishes a CD-ROM with 15+ years of comparative data for
those interested in pursuing further research. It is available on the OECD
website.
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