拉脱维亚:卫生系统审查。

Q1 Medicine Health systems in transition Pub Date : 2012-01-01
Uldis Mitenbergs, Maris Taube, Janis Misins, Eriks Mikitis, Atis Martinsons, Aiga Rurane, Wilm Quentin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对拉脱维亚卫生系统的分析回顾了组织和治理、卫生筹资、卫生保健提供、卫生改革和卫生系统绩效方面的最新发展。20多年来,拉脱维亚一直在不断改革其卫生系统。1991年独立后,拉脱维亚最初建立了一种社会健康保险制度。然而,分散规划和分散低效融资的问题导致这种情况逐渐逆转,并最终在2011年建立了国家卫生服务型系统。这些不断变化是在健康状况相对较差和资金有限的背景下发生的,个人负担沉重;在欧洲联盟(欧盟)中,拉脱维亚是自费保健费用比率最高的国家之一。金融危机造成的财政资源缺乏对政府构成了巨大挑战,政府努力确保向人民提供必要的保健服务,防止健康状况恶化。然而,这也为改革提供了动力:先前集中系统和从医院转向门诊护理的努力大大加快,同时实施了社会安全网战略(在世界银行的财政支持下),以保护穷人免受用户收费的负面影响。然而,与任何卫生系统一样,仍然存在一些挑战。它们包括:减少吸烟和心血管疾病死亡;增加处方药的覆盖率;减少对自费支付卫生系统资金的过度依赖;减少机会和健康状况方面的不平等;通过实施基于drg的融资,提高医院效率;监控和提高质量。在金融危机之际面对这些挑战,又出现了另一个挑战:通过增加公共卫生支出,确保卫生系统获得充足资金。
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Latvia: Health system review.

This analysis of the Latvian health system reviews recent developments in organization and governance, health financing, health care provision, health reforms and health-system performance. Latvia has been constantly reforming its health system for over two decades. After independence in 1991, Latvia initially moved to create a social health insurance type system. However, problems with decentralized planning and fragmented and inefficient financing led to this being gradually reversed, and ultimately the establishment in 2011 of a National Health Service type system. These constant changes have taken place against a backdrop of relatively poor health and limited funding, with a heavy burden for individuals; Latvia has one of the highest rates of out-of-pocket expenditure on health in the European Union (EU). The lack of financial resources resulting from the financial crisis has posed an enormous challenge to the government, which struggled to ensure the availability of necessary health care services for the population and to prevent deterioration of health status. Yet this also provided momentum for reforms: previous efforts to centralise the system and to shift from hospital to outpatient care were drastically accelerated, while at the same time a social safety net strategy was implemented (with financial support from the World Bank) to protect the poor from the negative consequences of user charges. However, as in any health system, a number of challenges remain. They include: reducing smoking and cardiovascular deaths; increasing coverage of prescription pharmaceuticals; reducing the excessive reliance on out-of-pocket payments for financing the health system; reducing inequities in access and health status; improving efficiency of hospitals through implementation of DRG-based financing; and monitoring and improving quality. In the face of these challenges at a time of financial crisis, one further challenge emerges: ensuring adequate funding for the health system through increased public expenditure on health.

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来源期刊
Health systems in transition
Health systems in transition Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
16.00
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Denmark: Health System Review. Estonia: Health System Review. Sweden: Health System Review. France: Health System Review. Health and Care Data: Approaches to data linkage for evidence-informed policy.
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