Explaining Convergence and Common Trends in the Role of the State in OECD Healthcare Systems

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Explaining Convergence and Common Trends in the Role of the State in OECD Healthcare Systems. / Cacace, Mirella; Götze, Ralf; Schmid, Achim et al.
In: Harvard Health Policy Review, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2008, p. 5-16.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{834e6a5085c248129cb2a405282324c8,
title = "Explaining Convergence and Common Trends in the Role of the State in OECD Healthcare Systems",
abstract = "This paper seeks to explain a convergence trend in the role of the state in OECD healthcare systems. By convergence we mean that healthcare systems become increasingly similar with regards to the public/private mix in financing and service provision, and with respect to their regulatory structure. In particular, we identify increasing similarities between the three system types we delineate as National Health Service, Social Health Insurance and Private Health Insurance systems. We argue that the specific healthcare system type is an essential explanatory factor. Systems tend to feature specific, type-related deficiencies, which cannot be solved by routine mechanisms. As a consequence, non system-specific elements and innovative policies are implemented which lead to the emergence of {\textquoteleft}hybrid{\textquoteright} systems indicating a trend towards convergence.",
keywords = "Health sciences",
author = "Mirella Cacace and Ralf G{\"o}tze and Achim Schmid and Heinz Rothgang",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "5--16",
journal = "Harvard Health Policy Review",
issn = "1945-5070",
publisher = "Harvard College",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Explaining Convergence and Common Trends in the Role of the State in OECD Healthcare Systems

AU - Cacace, Mirella

AU - Götze, Ralf

AU - Schmid, Achim

AU - Rothgang, Heinz

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - This paper seeks to explain a convergence trend in the role of the state in OECD healthcare systems. By convergence we mean that healthcare systems become increasingly similar with regards to the public/private mix in financing and service provision, and with respect to their regulatory structure. In particular, we identify increasing similarities between the three system types we delineate as National Health Service, Social Health Insurance and Private Health Insurance systems. We argue that the specific healthcare system type is an essential explanatory factor. Systems tend to feature specific, type-related deficiencies, which cannot be solved by routine mechanisms. As a consequence, non system-specific elements and innovative policies are implemented which lead to the emergence of ‘hybrid’ systems indicating a trend towards convergence.

AB - This paper seeks to explain a convergence trend in the role of the state in OECD healthcare systems. By convergence we mean that healthcare systems become increasingly similar with regards to the public/private mix in financing and service provision, and with respect to their regulatory structure. In particular, we identify increasing similarities between the three system types we delineate as National Health Service, Social Health Insurance and Private Health Insurance systems. We argue that the specific healthcare system type is an essential explanatory factor. Systems tend to feature specific, type-related deficiencies, which cannot be solved by routine mechanisms. As a consequence, non system-specific elements and innovative policies are implemented which lead to the emergence of ‘hybrid’ systems indicating a trend towards convergence.

KW - Health sciences

UR - http://www.hhpronline.org/past-print-issues/2008

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 9

SP - 5

EP - 16

JO - Harvard Health Policy Review

JF - Harvard Health Policy Review

SN - 1945-5070

IS - 1

ER -

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Machen Urlaubsreisen glücklich?
  2. European and national law in history and future
  3. Inexistent Ink
  4. Spanish-speaking caregivers’ use of referential labels with toddlers is a better predictor of later vocabulary than their use of referential gestures
  5. Strategies to Induce Non-cooperating Countries to Join a Climate-policy Coalition
  6. Value, values, symbols and outcomes
  7. Grain refinement of Mg-Al alloys by carbon inoculation
  8. Helping to improve suggestion systems
  9. Sensitive, simultaneous determination of P, S, Cl, Br and I containing pesticides in environmental samples by GC hyphenated with collision-cell ICP-MS
  10. Investigation on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Mg–Gd–Nd Ternary Alloys
  11. Editorial overview
  12. Endogenous environmental policy for small open economies with transboundary pollution
  13. Cross-cultural differences in consumers' perception of the credibility of cause-related marketing (CRM) campaigns
  14. Comparing the fatigue performance of Ti-4Al-0.005B titanium alloy T-joints, welded via different friction stir welding sequences
  15. Remaining time and opportunities at work: Relationships between age, work characteristics, and occupational future time perspective
  16. Guest Editorial
  17. A multivariate, multilevel analysis of the relationship between cognitive abilities and scholastic achievement
  18. Explaining primary school teachers’ intention to use digital learning platforms for students’ individualized practice
  19. Author Correction: Widening global variability in grassland biomass since the 1980s
  20. QUANT - Question Answering Benchmark Curator
  21. How to Assess Knowledge Cumulation in Environmental Governance Research? Conceptual and Empirical Explorations
  22. The Microstructure of the Great Export Collapse in German Manufacturing Industries, 2008/2009
  23. Utilization of phenolic compounds by microalgae
  24. Der Medienmanager - Unternehmer im Unternehmen

Press / Media

  1. Interview für NDR Das!