Author:
Liaropoulos Lycurgus,Kaitelidou Daphne
Abstract
In 1983 a health reform aimed to assure universal coverage and equity in the distribution of services in Greece.
The reform implied state responsibility for the financing and delivery of services and a reduction of the
private sector. The model was a Bismarckian scheme for social insurance. However, healthcare delivery
remains fragmented and uncoordinated and the private sector is getting stronger. The dominant payment
system is fee-for-service for the private sector and administered prices and salaries for public hospitals
and social insurance funds. The many insurers have their own eligibility requirements, validation
procedures, etc. Coverage of services by social security funds, probably among the most comprehensive
in Europe, is determined more on historical and political grounds than on efficiency or cost-effectiveness.
The system is plagued by problems, including geographical inequalities, overcentralization, bureaucratic
management, poor incentives in the public sector, open-ended financing, inefficient use of hospital beds,
and lack of cost-effectiveness. There are no specific legal provisions for the control of health technology.
Technologies are introduced without standards or formal consideration of needs. There are no current
efforts to control health technology in Greece. However, health technology assessment (HTA) has gained
increasing visibility. In 1997 a law provided for a new government agency responsible for quality
control, economic evaluation of health services, and HTA. The hope is that the new law may introduce
evaluation and assessment elements into health policy formulation and assure that cost effectiveness,
quality, and appropriate use of health technology will receive more attention.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
11 articles.
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