罗马尼亚:卫生系统审查。

Q1 Medicine Health systems in transition Pub Date : 2016-08-01
Cristian Vladescu, Silvia Gabriela Scintee, Victor Olsavszky, Cristina Hernandez-Quevedo, Anna Sagan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对罗马尼亚卫生系统的分析回顾了最近在组织和治理、卫生筹资、卫生保健提供、卫生改革和卫生系统绩效方面的发展。罗马尼亚医疗保健系统是一个社会医疗保险系统,尽管最近努力分散一些监管职能,但仍然高度集中。它为85%的受保人口提供全面的一揽子福利,其余人口可获得最低的一揽子福利。尽管每个被保险人无论其社会经济状况如何都可以获得相同的医疗保健福利,但在许多方面,例如农村与城市,在获得医疗保健方面存在不平等,而且这些方面的健康结果也有所不同。罗马尼亚人口的预期寿命在增加,死亡率在下降,但这两者在欧洲联盟中仍然是最差的。已经观察到一些不利的趋势,包括新的艾滋病毒/艾滋病诊断数量增加和免疫接种率下降。公共来源占卫生筹资总额的80%以上。然而,这留下了相当大的自付费用,几乎占总支出的五分之一。非正式支付的份额似乎也很大,但确切数字不详。2014年,罗马尼亚的卫生支出占欧盟成员国国内生产总值(GDP)的比例最低。根据政府加强初级保健作用的目标,医院床位总数一直在减少。然而,保健提供的特点仍然是初级和社区保健提供不足,住院和专科门诊护理,包括医院急诊科的护理使用不当。与欧盟平均水平相比,罗马尼亚的医生和护士数量相对较低。这主要是由于过去十年来工人移居国外的比率很高,而罗马尼亚加入欧盟和经济危机导致公共部门工资减少又加剧了这一情况。罗马尼亚卫生系统的改革一直在进行,但往往是无效的,部分原因是政治高度不稳定。最近的改革主要侧重于采取节约成本的措施,例如,试图通过回扣将一些保健费用转嫁给药品制造商,并通过共同支付将部分费用转嫁给民众,以及改进对保健支出的监测。
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Romania: Health System Review.

This analysis of the Romanian health system reviews recent developments in organization and governance, health financing, health care provision, health reforms and health system performance. The Romanian health care system is a social health insurance system that has remained highly centralized despite recent efforts to decentralize some regulatory functions. It provides a comprehensive benefits package to the 85% of the population that is covered, with the remaining population having access to a minimum package of benefits. While every insured person has access to the same health care benefits regardless of their socioeconomic situation, there are inequities in access to health care across many dimensions, such as rural versus urban, and health outcomes also differ across these dimensions. The Romanian population has seen increasing life expectancy and declining mortality rates but both remain among the worst in the European Union. Some unfavourable trends have been observed, including increasing numbers of new HIV/AIDS diagnoses and falling immunization rates. Public sources account for over 80% of total health financing. However, that leaves considerable out-of-pocket payments covering almost a fifth of total expenditure. The share of informal payments also seems to be substantial, but precise figures are unknown. In 2014, Romania had the lowest health expenditure as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) among the EU Member States. In line with the government's objective of strengthening the role of primary care, the total number of hospital beds has been decreasing. However, health care provision remains characterized by underprovision of primary and community care and inappropriate use of inpatient and specialized outpatient care, including care in hospital emergency departments. The numbers of physicians and nurses are relatively low in Romania compared to EU averages. This has mainly been attributed to the high rates of workers emigrating abroad over the past decade, exacerbated by Romania's EU accession and the reduction of public sector salaries due to the economic crisis. Reform in the Romanian health system has been both constant and yet frequently ineffective, due in part to the high degree of political instability. Recent reforms have focused mainly on introducing cost-saving measures, for example, by attempting to shift some of the health care costs to drug manufacturers by claw-back and to the population through co-payments, and on improving the monitoring of health care expenditure.

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Health systems in transition
Health systems in transition Medicine-Medicine (all)
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