Sweden health system review.

Q1 Medicine
Health systems in transition Pub Date : 2012-01-01
Anders Anell, Anna H Glenngård, Sherry Merkur
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Life expectancy in Sweden is high and the country performs well in comparisons related to disease-oriented indicators of health service outcomes and quality of care. The Swedish health system is committed to ensuring the health of all citizens and abides by the principles of human dignity, need and solidarity, and cost-effectiveness. The state is responsible for overall health policy, while the funding and provision of services lies largely with the county councils and regions. The municipalities are responsible for the care of older and disabled people. The majority of primary care centres and almost all hospitals are owned by the county councils. Health care expenditure is mainly tax funded (80%) and is equivalent to 9.9% of gross domestic product (GDP) (2009). Only about 4% of the population has voluntary health insurance (VHI). User charges fund about 17% of health expenditure and are levied on visits to professionals, hospitalization and medicines. The number of acute care hospital beds is below the European Union (EU) average and Sweden allocates more human resources to the health sector than most OECD countries. In the past, the Achilles heel of Swedish health care included long waiting times for diagnosis and treatment and, more recently, divergence in quality of care between regions and socioeconomic groups. Addressing long waiting times remains a key policy objective along with improving access to providers. Recent principal health reforms over the past decade relate to: concentrating hospital services; regionalizing health care services, including mergers; improving coordinated care; increasing choice, competition and privatization in primary care; privatization and competition in the pharmacy sector; changing co-payments; and increasing attention to public comparison of quality and efficiency indicators, the value of investments in health care and responsiveness to patients needs. Reforms are often introduced on the local level, thus the pattern of reform varies across local government, although mimicking behaviour usually occurs.

瑞典卫生系统审查。
瑞典人的预期寿命很高,在卫生服务成果和保健质量等面向疾病的指标方面,瑞典表现良好。瑞典卫生系统致力于确保所有公民的健康,并遵守人的尊严、需要和团结以及成本效益的原则。国家负责总体卫生政策,而资金和服务的提供主要由县议会和地区负责。各市负责照顾老年人和残疾人。大多数初级保健中心和几乎所有医院都归县议会所有。保健支出主要由税收资助(80%),相当于国内生产总值的9.9%(2009年)。只有大约4%的人口拥有自愿医疗保险(VHI)。用户费用约占卫生支出的17%,是对专业人员就诊、住院和药品征收的。急诊病床的数量低于欧洲联盟(欧盟)的平均水平,瑞典向卫生部门分配的人力资源比大多数经合组织国家都多。过去,瑞典卫生保健的致命弱点包括等待诊断和治疗的时间过长,最近,各地区和社会经济群体之间的保健质量存在差异。解决漫长的等待时间问题仍然是一个关键的政策目标,同时改善获得医疗服务的机会。过去十年来最近的主要卫生改革涉及:集中医院服务;将保健服务区域化,包括合并;改善协调护理;增加初级保健的选择、竞争和私有化;医药部门的私有化和竞争;改变自付额;对质量和效率指标、卫生保健投资的价值以及对患者需求的响应的公共比较的关注日益增加。改革往往是在地方一级进行的,因此不同地方政府的改革模式各不相同,尽管模仿行为经常发生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health systems in transition
Health systems in transition Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
16.00
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0.00%
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