Title: The Danish Health System
1The Danish Health System
- Karsten Vrangbæk
- University of Copenhagen
- Political Science
2The Danish Health System
- A short overview of the Danish health system
- Decentralization and coordination
- Performance and cross regional variation
3Who is covered?
- Coverage is universal. All those registered as
resident in Denmark are entitled to health care
that is largely free at the point of use.
4What is covered?
- Services The publicly-financed health system
covers all primary and specialist (hospital)
services based on medical assessment of need. - Cost sharing There are very few cost-sharing
arrangements for publicly-covered services. Cost
sharing applies to dental care for those aged 18
and over, to outpatient drugs and to personal
aids such as glasses (but not hearing aids, which
are free). - Out of pocket payments (including cost sharing)
account for about 14 of total health expenditure
(World Health Organization 2007).
5How are revenues generated?
- Publicly-financed health care Since 2007 the
central government through a centrally-collected
tax set at 8 of taxable income and earmarked for
health - The central government allocates this revenue to
5 regions (80) and 98 municipalities (20) using
a risk-adjusted capitation formula and some
activity-based payment. Public expenditure
accounts for around 82 of total health
expenditure. - Voluntary private health insurance growing fast!
6How is the delivery system organised?
- Five regions are responsible for providing
hospital care and own and run hospitals and
prenatal care centres. - The regions also finance general practitioners,
specialists, physiotherapists, dentists and
pharmaceuticals. - The 98 municipalities are responsible for public
health, school dental care, rehabilitation
outside hospitals
7How is the delivery system organised?
- Physicians Self-employed general practitioners
act as gatekeepers to secondary care and are paid
via a combination of capitation (30) and fee for
service. Hospital physicians are employed by the
regions and paid a salary. Non-hospital based
specialists are paid on a fee for service basis. - Hospitals Almost all hospitals are publicly
owned (99 of hospital beds are public). They are
paid via fixed budgets (determined through soft
contracts with the regions) and some fee for
service.
8How was decentralisation introduced in the Danish
health care system?
- Decentralized democratic management of welfare
services has been a feature of the Danish system
for many years. - A major reform in 1970 reduced the number of
counties to 14 and established the counties as
the main public authority within health care. The
counties took ownership of almost all hospitals
and became responsible for financing and
providing health care.
9How was decentralisation introduced in the Danish
health care system?
- In 2007, a major structural reform introduced 5
regions to replace the 13 counties. The 271
municipalites were amalgamated into 98. - The regions retained the responsibility for
providing hospital and outpatient care for
citizens, but importantly lost the right to issue
taxes, as financing was centralized to the state
level.
10Decentralization and its limits
- The regions are responsible for delivering health
services, within national framework legislation,
national guidelines and national agreements e.g.
between medical professionals and the Association
of Regions.
11Decentralization and its limits
- National legislation Establishes the duties for
the Regions in providing health care. - Free choice of public and some private hospitals
upon referral - Access to a range of private facilities in
Denmark and abroad when waiting times exceed 1
month. - Fees for choice patients travelling to other
regions and private providers are paid according
to nationally set DRG prices. - -gt Both types of choice reduce the scope for
regional level deviation e.g. on waiting times
and quality
12Decentralization and its limits
- Planning, guidelines and recommendations
- Developed by the National Board of Health but in
collaboration with medical societies and regions - The National Board of health is also in charge of
general supervision and supervision of medical
personnel - The NBoH houses units for Health Technology
Assessment and development of reference programs - A comprehensive Danish Program for Quality
Assessment is currently being implemented.
13Decentralization and its limits
- Planning, guidelines and recommendations
- A comprehensive Danish Program for Quality
Assessment is currently being implemented. - The program combines organizational
self-assessment with mandatory accreditation
based on nationally developed standards. - Hospital level results will be published on the
internet. And will replace the current
publication of waiting time and quality
indicators (sundhedskvalitet.dk)
14Decentralization and its limits
- National agreements
- Annual agreements between the regions/municipaliti
es and the government specify expenditure levels
and average tax levels (for municipalites). - The
agreements also serve as an arena for negotiating
new policy initiatives - National agreements between the Association of
Regions and medical professions determine
salaries and working conditions (for hospital
doctors) and fees for the publicly funded
contacts to GPs and practicing specialists.
15Decentralization and its limits
- Some regional and hospital level variation can be
observed in spite of these coordination
mechanisms, and the focus on geographical equity
in the structural reform
16Regional differences in hospital productivity
Source Ministry of Health and Prevention 2007
17Regional differences in contacts to general
practice
Source Region Zealand
18Hospital Variation in Use of Secondary Preventive
Medicine After Discharge for First Acute
Myocardial Infarction During 1995-2004.
Rasmussen S, Abildstrom SZ, Rasmussen JN,
Gislason GH, Schramm TK, Folke F, Køber L,
Torp-Pedersen C, Madsen M, Medical Care 2008
Jan46(1)70-77
19Strengths , weaknesses, opportunities and threats
- Expenditure control is good
- Significant activity and productivity increases
in recent years - Short hospital stays and high degree of
conversion to ambulatory care - Waiting times reduced (one month guarantee in
place) - Administrative costs considered to be low
- Patient satisfaction ratings are among the
highest in Europe. - Choice and flexibility
- Implementation of cancer packages
OECD Economic Survey for Danmark 2007, Ministry
of Health Benchmarking reports
20Health Care Expenditure per Capita 2005, USD PPP
21Satisfaction population reporting the quality of
the following are fairly or very good
Source Euro-barometer, 2007.
22Affordability of health-care percentage of
persons reporting the following are not very or
not at all affordable
Source Euro-barometer, 2007.
23Strengths , weaknesses, opportunities and threats
- Life expectancy relatively poor (but improving)
- Scope for quality improvement in some treatment
areas - -gt Life style issues rather than health system
performance per se?
24Strengths , weaknesses, opportunities and threats
25Strengths , weaknesses, opportunities and threats
26Strengths , weaknesses, opportunities and threats
27Strengths , weaknesses, opportunities and threats
28Opportunities and threats
- Life style (prevention and health promotion)
- Coordinated care (patient pathways),
- Ageing population (implications for both funding
and demands for health care), - More demand for chronic care
- Changing family structure
- Rapid growth in voluntary health insurance and
private care delivery (threat to solidarity in
the long run?) - Reaping the benefits of the new regional
structure Infrastructure investments and cost
control - Internationalization, EU and cross border health
care - Implementation of Quality Assessment Program