Monday, November 10, 2008

UK - OECD Summary

Summaries of summaries of healthcare systems based on the Commonwealth Fund reports.
Author(s) of the originals are:
Karsten Vrangbaek, Isabelle Durand-Zaleski, Reinhard Busse, Niek Klazinga, Sean Boyle, and Anders Anell

UK/NHS
• The UK, along with Sweden, is a prototypical socialized system.
• Essentially everyone is covered and all the funding takes place through a federal government taxes.
• General taxes account for 76% of the funding and then there are national insurance contributions to account for 19% of the funding. (I do not understand what the national insurance contributions are or where this money comes from.)
• User charges also account for a further 5% of the funding.
• Cost-sharing amounts to small drug co-pays of $14 but this is only for about 12% of all prescriptions written so it is therefore relatively small amount. In other words 80% of prescriptions require no co-pay.
• Dental requires up to $400 per year out of pocket before reimbursement occurs (I think).
• Out-of-pocket expenses account for 12% of the total health care expenditure.
• Primary care physicians are paid directly by the primary care trusts through capitation, salary, and fee-for-service arrangements.
• Hospitals are run by national health service trusts.
• Consultants and specialists are salaried.
• The private system in Britain covers approximately 12% of the population. It is a mix of profit and not-for-profit providers as well as supplementary insurance.

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