Research Catalog

Health Care Reform and Long-Term Care in the Netherlands

Title
Health Care Reform and Long-Term Care in the Netherlands [electronic resource] / Erik Schut, Stéphane Sorbe and Jens Høj
Author
Schut, Erik.
Publication
Paris : OECD Publishing, 2013.

Available Online

Full text online available onsite at NYPL

Details

Additional Authors
  • Sorbe, Stéphane.
  • Høj, Jens.
Description
37 p.; 21 x 29.7cm.
Summary
The Netherlands, as other OECD countries, faces the challenge of providing high quality health and long-term care services to an ageing population in a cost-efficient manner. In the health care sector, reforms have aimed at introducing more competition. Despite major changes and some positive effects, the reforms run the risk of getting stuck in the middle between a centralised system of state-controlled supply and prices and a decentralised system based on regulated competition, providing insufficient incentives for provision of quality services and expenditure control. The main challenges are to complete the transition to regulated competition in health care provision, to strengthen the role of health insurers as purchasing agents and to secure cost containment in an increasingly demand-driven health care sector. In 2012, reforms expanded the role of the market in the hospital sector and reinforced budget controls. Both measures are not consistent and may jeopardize both objectives. More competitive markets require, at least, provision of good quality information, appropriate financing and better efficiency incentives. In view of population ageing, current policies mean that the cost of long-term care is set to more than double over the coming decades. Insufficient incentives for cost-efficient purchasing of long-term care should be addressed. However, the government?s plan to transfer long-term care purchasing to health insurers is unpromising unless additional measures ensure that insurers bear the associated financial risks. In addition, home care should be further encouraged at the expense of institutional care, while screening and targeting should be improved. This Working Paper relates to the 2012 OECD Economic Survey of the Netherlands (www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/Netherlands.
Series Statement
OECD Economics Department Working Papers, 1815-1973 ; no.1010
Uniform Title
OECD Economics Department Working Papers, no.1010.
Subject
  • Social Issues/Migration/Health
  • Economics
  • Netherlands
LCCN
10.1787/5k4dlw04vx0n-en
OCLC
oecd-lib-003648
Author
Schut, Erik.
Title
Health Care Reform and Long-Term Care in the Netherlands [electronic resource] / Erik Schut, Stéphane Sorbe and Jens Høj
Imprint
Paris : OECD Publishing, 2013.
Series
OECD Economics Department Working Papers, 1815-1973 ; no.1010
OECD Economics Department Working Papers, 1815-1973 ; no.1010.
Connect to:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/5k4dlw04vx0n-en
Indexed Term
Social Issues/Migration/Health
Economics
Netherlands
Added Author
Sorbe, Stéphane.
Høj, Jens.
Other Standard Identifier
10.1787/5k4dlw04vx0n-en doi
View in Legacy Catalog