Mehtap Tatar, Salih Mollahaliloğlu, Bayram Sahin, Sabahattin Aydin, Anna Maresso, Cristina Hernández-Quevedo
{"title":"火鸡卫生系统审查。","authors":"Mehtap Tatar, Salih Mollahaliloğlu, Bayram Sahin, Sabahattin Aydin, Anna Maresso, Cristina Hernández-Quevedo","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Turkey has accomplished remarkable improvements in terms of health status in the last three decades, particularly after the implementation of the Health Transformation Program (HTP (Saglikta Donus, um Programi)). Average life expectancy reached 71.8 for men and 76.8 for women in 2010. The infant mortality rate (IMR) decreased to 10.1 per 1000 live births in 2010, down from 117.5 in 1980. Despite these achievements, there are still discrepancies in terms of infant mortality between rural and urban areas and different parts of the country, although these have been diminishing over the years. The higher infant mortality rates in rural areas can be attributed to low socioeconomic conditions, low female education levels and the prevalence of infectious diseases. The main causes of death are diseases of the circulatory system followed by malignant neoplasms. Turkeys health care system has been undergoing a far-reaching reform process (HTP) since 2003 and radical changes have occurred both in the provision and the financing of health care services. Health services are now financed through a social security scheme covering the majority of the population, the General Health Insurance Scheme (GHIS (Genel Saglik Sigortasi)), and services are provided both by public and private sector facilities. The Social Security Institution (SSI (Sosyal Guvenlik Kurumu)), financed through payments by employers and employees and government contributions in cases of budget deficit, has become a monopsonic (single buyer) power on the purchasing side of health care services. On the provision side, the Ministry of Health (Saglik Bakenligi) is the main actor and provides primary, secondary and tertiary care through its facilities across the country. Universities are also major providers of tertiary care. The private sector has increased its range over recent years, particularly after arrangements paved the way for private sector provision of services to the SSI. The most important reforms since 2003 have been improvements in citizens health status, the introduction of the GHIS, the instigation of a purchaser provider split in the health care system, the introduction of a family practitioner scheme nationwide, the introduction of a performance-based payment system in Ministry of Health hospitals, and transferring the ownership of the majority of public hospitals to the Ministry of Health. Future challenges for the Turkish health care system include, reorganizing and enforcing a referral system from primary to higher levels of care, improving the supply of health care staff, introducing and extending public hospital governance structures that aim to grant autonomous status to public hospitals, and further improving patient rights.</p>","PeriodicalId":38995,"journal":{"name":"Health systems in transition","volume":"13 6","pages":"1-186, xiii-xiv"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Turkey. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
土耳其在过去三十年中,特别是在实施卫生改革方案(Saglikta Donus, um Programi)之后,在卫生状况方面取得了显著改善。2010年,男性和女性的平均预期寿命分别达到71.8岁和76.8岁。婴儿死亡率从1980年的117.5‰降至2010年的10.1‰。尽管取得了这些成就,但在农村和城市地区以及全国不同地区之间,婴儿死亡率仍然存在差异,尽管这种差异多年来一直在减少。农村地区较高的婴儿死亡率可归因于低社会经济条件、低女性教育水平和传染病流行。死亡的主要原因是循环系统疾病,其次是恶性肿瘤。土耳其的卫生保健系统自2003年以来一直在进行一项影响深远的改革进程(HTP),在卫生保健服务的提供和筹资方面都发生了根本性的变化。保健服务现在通过覆盖大多数人口的社会保障计划,即一般健康保险计划(GHIS (Genel Saglik Sigortasi))提供资金,服务由公共和私营部门设施提供。社会保障机构(SSI)的资金来自雇主和雇员的支付,在出现预算赤字的情况下由政府缴纳,它已成为医疗保健服务采购方面的单一购买者。在提供方面,卫生部是主要行动者,通过其在全国各地的设施提供初级、二级和三级保健。大学也是三级保健的主要提供者。近年来,私营机构的服务范围有所扩大,特别是在为私营机构向社会保障指数提供服务铺平道路之后。自2003年以来,最重要的改革是改善公民健康状况,引入全民健康保险制度,在医疗保健系统中推行购买者和提供者分开制度,在全国范围内推行家庭医生计划,在卫生部下属医院实行基于绩效的支付制度,以及将大多数公立医院的所有权转让给卫生部。土耳其卫生保健系统未来面临的挑战包括:重组和执行从初级保健到高级保健的转诊制度,改善卫生保健人员的供应,引入和扩大旨在赋予公立医院自主地位的公立医院治理结构,并进一步改善患者权利。
Turkey has accomplished remarkable improvements in terms of health status in the last three decades, particularly after the implementation of the Health Transformation Program (HTP (Saglikta Donus, um Programi)). Average life expectancy reached 71.8 for men and 76.8 for women in 2010. The infant mortality rate (IMR) decreased to 10.1 per 1000 live births in 2010, down from 117.5 in 1980. Despite these achievements, there are still discrepancies in terms of infant mortality between rural and urban areas and different parts of the country, although these have been diminishing over the years. The higher infant mortality rates in rural areas can be attributed to low socioeconomic conditions, low female education levels and the prevalence of infectious diseases. The main causes of death are diseases of the circulatory system followed by malignant neoplasms. Turkeys health care system has been undergoing a far-reaching reform process (HTP) since 2003 and radical changes have occurred both in the provision and the financing of health care services. Health services are now financed through a social security scheme covering the majority of the population, the General Health Insurance Scheme (GHIS (Genel Saglik Sigortasi)), and services are provided both by public and private sector facilities. The Social Security Institution (SSI (Sosyal Guvenlik Kurumu)), financed through payments by employers and employees and government contributions in cases of budget deficit, has become a monopsonic (single buyer) power on the purchasing side of health care services. On the provision side, the Ministry of Health (Saglik Bakenligi) is the main actor and provides primary, secondary and tertiary care through its facilities across the country. Universities are also major providers of tertiary care. The private sector has increased its range over recent years, particularly after arrangements paved the way for private sector provision of services to the SSI. The most important reforms since 2003 have been improvements in citizens health status, the introduction of the GHIS, the instigation of a purchaser provider split in the health care system, the introduction of a family practitioner scheme nationwide, the introduction of a performance-based payment system in Ministry of Health hospitals, and transferring the ownership of the majority of public hospitals to the Ministry of Health. Future challenges for the Turkish health care system include, reorganizing and enforcing a referral system from primary to higher levels of care, improving the supply of health care staff, introducing and extending public hospital governance structures that aim to grant autonomous status to public hospitals, and further improving patient rights.