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The pros and cons of integrated care implementation in Central and Eastern Europe – a perspective from 9 CEE countries
IntroductionHealth and social care systems in Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries have undergone significant changes and are currently dealing with serious problems of system disintegration, coordination, and a lack of control over the market environment.DescriptionThe increased health need...
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Published in: | International journal of integrated care 2022-04, Vol.22 (S1), p.56 |
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creator | Kurpas, Donata Shpakou, Andrei Halata, David Mohos, András Skarbaliene, Aelita Dumitra, Gindrovel |
description | IntroductionHealth and social care systems in Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries have undergone significant changes and are currently dealing with serious problems of system disintegration, coordination, and a lack of control over the market environment.DescriptionThe increased health needs related to the aging society and epidemiological patterns in these countries also require funding needs to increase, rationing to be reformed, sectors to be integrated (the managed care approach), and an analytical information base to be developed if supervision of new technological approaches is to improve. The period of system transitions in CEE countries entailed significant changes in their health systems, including health care financing.DiscussionLarge deficits in the public financing of health systems were just one of the challenges arising from the economic downturn of the 1990s, which in a number of CEE countries was coupled with inflation, increasing unemployment, low salaries, a large informal sector, and tax evasion. During the communist period, there had been universal access to a wide range of health services, and it proved difficult to retain this coverage. Many states sought to ration publicly funded health services - for example, through patient cost-sharing or decreasing the scope of basic benefits. Yet not all these reform plans were implemented, and in fact some were rolled-back or not even implemented at all due to a lack of social or political consensus.ConclusionCEE health systems had come to practice implicit rationing, in the form of under-the-table payments from patients, quasi-formal payments to providers to compensate for a lack of funding, and long waiting lists forcing patients to the private sector. All these difficulties pose a challenge to the implementation of integrated care. |
doi_str_mv | 10.5334/ijic.ICIC21030 |
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The period of system transitions in CEE countries entailed significant changes in their health systems, including health care financing.DiscussionLarge deficits in the public financing of health systems were just one of the challenges arising from the economic downturn of the 1990s, which in a number of CEE countries was coupled with inflation, increasing unemployment, low salaries, a large informal sector, and tax evasion. During the communist period, there had been universal access to a wide range of health services, and it proved difficult to retain this coverage. Many states sought to ration publicly funded health services - for example, through patient cost-sharing or decreasing the scope of basic benefits. Yet not all these reform plans were implemented, and in fact some were rolled-back or not even implemented at all due to a lack of social or political consensus.ConclusionCEE health systems had come to practice implicit rationing, in the form of under-the-table payments from patients, quasi-formal payments to providers to compensate for a lack of funding, and long waiting lists forcing patients to the private sector. All these difficulties pose a challenge to the implementation of integrated care.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1568-4156</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1568-4156</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.5334/ijic.ICIC21030</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Paterna: Ubiquity Press</publisher><subject>Health services ; Integrated delivery systems</subject><ispartof>International journal of integrated care, 2022-04, Vol.22 (S1), p.56</ispartof><rights>2021. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 (the “License”). 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The period of system transitions in CEE countries entailed significant changes in their health systems, including health care financing.DiscussionLarge deficits in the public financing of health systems were just one of the challenges arising from the economic downturn of the 1990s, which in a number of CEE countries was coupled with inflation, increasing unemployment, low salaries, a large informal sector, and tax evasion. During the communist period, there had been universal access to a wide range of health services, and it proved difficult to retain this coverage. Many states sought to ration publicly funded health services - for example, through patient cost-sharing or decreasing the scope of basic benefits. Yet not all these reform plans were implemented, and in fact some were rolled-back or not even implemented at all due to a lack of social or political consensus.ConclusionCEE health systems had come to practice implicit rationing, in the form of under-the-table payments from patients, quasi-formal payments to providers to compensate for a lack of funding, and long waiting lists forcing patients to the private sector. 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The period of system transitions in CEE countries entailed significant changes in their health systems, including health care financing.DiscussionLarge deficits in the public financing of health systems were just one of the challenges arising from the economic downturn of the 1990s, which in a number of CEE countries was coupled with inflation, increasing unemployment, low salaries, a large informal sector, and tax evasion. During the communist period, there had been universal access to a wide range of health services, and it proved difficult to retain this coverage. Many states sought to ration publicly funded health services - for example, through patient cost-sharing or decreasing the scope of basic benefits. Yet not all these reform plans were implemented, and in fact some were rolled-back or not even implemented at all due to a lack of social or political consensus.ConclusionCEE health systems had come to practice implicit rationing, in the form of under-the-table payments from patients, quasi-formal payments to providers to compensate for a lack of funding, and long waiting lists forcing patients to the private sector. All these difficulties pose a challenge to the implementation of integrated care.</abstract><cop>Paterna</cop><pub>Ubiquity Press</pub><doi>10.5334/ijic.ICIC21030</doi><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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title | The pros and cons of integrated care implementation in Central and Eastern Europe – a perspective from 9 CEE countries |
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