《健康经济学》课件Chapter16.ppt
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- 健康经济学 健康 经济学 课件 Chapter16
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1、The Beveridge PlanUK:National Health Services Bill of 1946Based on a plan by economist William Beveridge focused on shared sacrifice and national solidarityBeveridge Model has three defining featuresUniversal,single-payer insurancePublic health care provisionFree care The three defining featuresUniv
2、ersal,single payer insurance:All citizens receive insurance from government,financed by taxes and not premiumsPublic health care provision:Hospital and clinics run by the governmentFree careCare provided for free at government hospitalsFree at the point of care Some exceptions for prescriptions drug
3、s,eye care,and dentistry Aim of the Beveridge modelHealth care is a good provided by the government and paid for with tax revenueLike public schools,libraries,and parks Allocation of health care based on need and not ability to payEliminates price rationingPromotes equityCountries with the Beveridge
4、 modelBeveridge blueprint adopted in Commonwealth and Scandinavian countriesUK Canada Australia etc.Sweden Norway etc.Variations in implementationCanadian hospitals nominally private but effectively government runSome cost-sharing in SwedenAustralia also has a private hospital sector among othersRat
5、ioning health care without pricesEvery health care system faces two fundamental questions:how much health care should be produced?who should get it?Private markets use prices to answer these questions Scarce resources go to those willing and able to pay the most for them(price rationing)With price r
6、ationing,poor are disadvantagedIf not price rationing,then what?Health care is free in Beveridge systems so must be another way of rationing careSome strategies include:QueuingGatekeepingLimiting coverage through health technology assessmentQueues and gatekeepersWhy do queues arise?Because Beveridge
7、 governments mandate free(or very-low cost)careDemand can be highIn private markets,physician and nurse salaries increase so that supply matches demandIn Beveridge systems,salaries set by government so market cannot equilibrate High demand and low supply results in queuesCost of queuesAs a result of
8、 long queues,1990:median wait times for English patients was 5 monthsMore than 50%of patients had to wait longer than a year!There could be patients desperately needing quick care but not receiving itLong wait times a very politically sensitive issueMany reforms since then focused on reducing long w
9、ait times Benefits of queuesQueues may limit moral hazardE.g.long wait times deter people who do not actually need the costly procedureIn a 1980s mail survey of patients waiting for orthopedic surgery at one UK hospital,only 48%of the 757 people still wanted the surgeryUnlike price rationing,queues
10、treat the rich and poor equallyPromotes the equity goal of Beveridge systems A model of queuesSuppose there are two types of patients:U-patients:those for whom the surgery would be very usefulW-patients:those for whom the surgery would only be marginally usefulLet Up represent poor patients for whom
11、 surgery would be usefulA model of queuesBecause of first-come first-serve,low-benefit W-patients receive treatment before high-benefit U-patientsInefficiency arises because care is free for everyoneW-patients do not internalize costs of care so join queue anyway Price rationingSuppose instead that
12、patients had to pay an out-of-pocket fee for treatmentThis reduces the queuing problem because W-patients would never sign up for treatmentBut price rationing also removes Up-patients ones who need treatment but cannot afford itGatekeepingNeed an alternative to price rationing to separate W and U pa
13、tientsIn most Beveridge systems,all patients must first visit a general practitioner(GP)before they can see a specialistGPs act as gatekeepers:Only patients they deem as needing care may then visit a specialistEstimating the welfare loss from queuesIf gatekeepers are effective,then queues look like:
14、If so,long queues mean lots of people needing care do not receive it quicklyPotentially huge welfare loss from long queuesWant to estimate how large the welfare loss is Estimating the welfare loss from queuesThree strategies:#1:Hypothetical questions about how much patients would be willing to pay t
15、o receive care now#2:Calculate welfare loss from patient willingness to pay extra for private care#3:Calculate welfare loss from patient willingness to travel to farther hospitals to receive quicker careAll three methods find for non-urgent procedures,a month reduction in waiting time is only worth
16、around$200This low estimate remains a puzzle compared to the attention long waiting times receive!Queue reduction policiesIncreased used of gatekeepersStricter eligibility thresholds for carePrioritizing patients so not just first-come first-serveHire more doctors and build more hospitalsHigher sala
17、ries for medical staffOutsource care to private providersDecrease demandIncrease supplyTo reduce queuing,either decrease demand or increase supplyQueue reduction policiesEach reduction strategy involves some tradeoff between equity,health,and wealth Governments typically adopt a combination of these
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