希腊:卫生系统审查。

Q1 Medicine
Health systems in transition Pub Date : 2010-01-01
Charalambos Economou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

转型期卫生系统概况是以国家为基础的报告,详细描述卫生系统以及正在进行或正在制定的政策举措。HiTs审查组织、筹资和提供卫生服务的不同方法以及卫生系统中主要行为体的作用;描述卫生和保健政策的体制框架、过程、内容和实施;并强调需要更深入分析的挑战和领域。在过去几十年里,希腊人口的健康状况有了很大改善,与其他经合发组织和欧洲联盟(欧盟)国家相比似乎相对有利。卫生系统是公共综合、公共合同和公共偿还模式的混合体,包括公共和私营部门的要素,并纳入不同组织模式的原则。获得服务的基础是公民身份和职业地位。该系统由国家预算、社会保险缴款和私人支付提供资金。保健支出的最大份额是私人支出,主要是自付形式,这也是保健支出总体增加的最大因素。保健服务的提供是基于公共和私人提供者。私人提供者的存在在初级保健方面更为明显,特别是在诊断技术、私人医生的做法和药品方面。尽管在改善人口健康方面取得了成功,但希腊卫生保健系统在组织、融资和提供服务方面面临着严重的结构性问题。由于缺乏成本控制措施和确定的供资标准,疾病基金面临经济限制和预算赤字。私人支出的高比例违背了公平筹资和平等获得保健服务的原则。由于缺乏提高公共部门绩效的激励措施,效率受到质疑。需求评估和确定优先次序的机制不发达,因此,卫生资源的区域分配不平等。该系统的集中化加上缺乏规划和协调以及有限的管理和行政能力。此外,医生供过于求、转诊制度的缺乏以及不合理的定价和报销政策都是鼓励秘密支付和黑色经济的因素。这些缺点导致公民对医疗保健系统的满意度较低。希腊卫生保健系统发展的里程碑是1983年建立的国家卫生系统(ESY)。本报告描述了经济社会经济体系在结构层面的发展,以及总体上实施改革的过程。保健改革举措的战略目标是,按照原来的社会经济服务建议建立一个统一的保健部门,并解决目前效率低下的问题。然而,1990年代尝试的三项改革从未得到充分实施,2000-2004年期间雄心勃勃的改革项目规定了系统区域化、新的管理结构、预期报销、医院医生的新就业条件、公共卫生服务现代化和初级卫生保健的重组,但在2004年选举和政府换届后被废除。2005年启动的新战略,其目标是确保医疗保健系统在短期内的财政可行性和长期的可持续性,虽然解决了具体的弱点,但它一直颇有争议:引入集中行政公共采购制度,发展公立医院建设的公私合作模式和医药保健改革,都伴随着医院专业管理的废除和政治管理的取代。裙带主义和党派思维占主导地位,而不是建立共识,导致卫生政策缺乏连续性和带来变革的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Greece: Health system review.

The Health Systems in Transition (HiT) profiles are country-based reports that provide a detailed description of a health system and of policy initiatives in progress or under development. HiTs examine different approaches to the organization, financing and delivery of health services and the role of the main actors in health systems; describe the institutional framework, process, content and implementation of health and health care policies; and highlight challenges and areas that require more in-depth analysis. The health status of the Greek population has strongly improved over the last few decades and seems to compare relatively favourably with other OECD and European Union (EU) countries. The health system is a mixture of public integrated, public contract and public reimbursement models, comprising elements from both the public and private sectors and incorporating principles of different organizational patterns. Access to services is based on citizenship as well as on occupational status.The system is financed by the state budget, social insurance contributions and private payments.The largest share of health expenditure constitutes private expenditure, mainly in the form of out of pocket payments which is also the element contributing most to the overall increase in health expenditure. The delivery of health care services is based on both public and private providers. The presence of private providers is more obvious in primary care,especially in diagnostic technologies, private physicians' practices and pharmaceuticals. Despite success in improving the health of the population, the Greek health care system faces serious structural problems concerning the organization, financing and delivery of services. It suffers from the absence of cost-containment measures and defined criteria for funding, resulting in sickness funds experiencing economic constraints and budget deficits. The high percentage of private expenditure goes against the principle of fair financing and equity in access to health care services. Efficiency is in question due to the lack of incentives to improve performance in the public sector. Mechanisms for needs assessment and priority-setting are underdeveloped and, as a consequence, the regional distribution of health resources is unequal. Centralization of the system is coupled with a lack of planning and coordination, and limited managerial and administrative capacity. In addition, the oversupply of physicians, the absence of a referral system, and irrational pricing and reimbursement policies are factors encouraging under-the-table payments and the black economy. These shortcomings result in low satisfaction with the health care system expressed by citizens. The landmark in the development of the Greek health care system was the creation of the national health system (ESY) in 1983. This report describes the development of the ESY at the structural level and generally, the process of implementing reforms. The strategic targets of health reform initiatives have been to structure a unified health care sector along the lines of the original ESY proposal and to cope with current inefficiencies. However, the three reforms attempted in the 1990s were never fully implemented, while the ambitious reform project of the period 2000–2004, which provided for the regionalization of the system, new management structures, prospective reimbursement, new employment conditions for hospital doctors, modernization of public health services and reorganization of primary health care, was abolished after the elections of 2004 and a change in government. While the new strategy, launched in 2005 with the stated aims of securing the financial viability of the health care system in the short term and its sustainability in the long term, addressed specific weaknesses, it has been rather controversial: the introduction of a centralized administrative public procurement system, the development of public–private partnerships (PPPs) for the construction of public hospitals and the reform of pharmaceutical care have been accompanied by the abolition of professional hospital management and its replacement by political administration. The dominance of clientelism and party thinking instead of consensus-building has resulted in a health policy that lacks continuity and the ability to bring about change.

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Health systems in transition
Health systems in transition Medicine-Medicine (all)
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