Een studie voor de Nederlandse Vereniging van Ziekenhuizen, uitgevoerd 2000/2001 met een stuurgroep onder voorzitterschap van Giel Huffmeier, naar een toekomstvisie op de ziekenhuizen in 2010.
Report
Share
Report
Share
1 of 88
Download to read offline
More Related Content
An exploration of future hospital care in 10 countries
1. An exploration of
future hospital care
in 10 countries
Australia
Belgium
Canada
France
Germany
Greece
Spain
Sweden
United States
United Kingdom
Dutch Hospital Association
NVZ Vereniging van Ziekenhuizen
P.O. Box 75784, NL-1070 AT Amsterdam, The Netherlands, tel. +31 (0)20 – 3014502, fax +31 (0)20 – 3014509
e-mail: info@public-space.com website: www.public-space.com
2. Dutch Hospital Association 2
Amsterdam, August 2001
By
Joost J. van Katwijk
Public SPACE
P.O. Box 75784
1070 AT Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Tel +31 (0)20 – 3014502
Fax +31 (0)20 – 3014509
e-mail: info@public-space.com
www.public-space.com
Future hospital care
3. Dutch Hospital Association 3
Contents
1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 4
2. Expenditures, resources and utilization....................................................................................... 6
3. Country reports ............................................................................................................................. 8
Australia ...................................................................................................................................... 9
Belgium ....................................................................................................................................... 16
Canada......................................................................................................................................... 22
France.......................................................................................................................................... 28
Germany ...................................................................................................................................... 32
Greece ......................................................................................................................................... 38
Spain ........................................................................................................................................... 46
Sweden ........................................................................................................................................ 54
United Kingdom. ......................................................................................................................... 60
United States ............................................................................................................................... 67
4. Trends & emerging patterns ........................................................................................................ 74
General ........................................................................................................................................ 74
Trends influencing hospitals ....................................................................................................... 74
Trends on future strategic position of hospitals among other healthcare providers .................... 76
Trends on the future internal organization of hospitals ............................................................... 78
Trends and their impact on hospitals........................................................................................... 83
Sources................................................................................................................................................ 85
Future hospital care
4. Dutch Hospital Association 4
1. Introduction
The changes in health care are profound and irreversible. The increasing demand for better and more
customized care has an enormous impact on the providers of care. Innovations, new technologies and
advanced procedures are fueling the urgent need for change in clinical and managerial processes. These
developments require the constant attention of governments, the private sector and civil entrepreneurs.
In order to be able to take a proactive stance, the Dutch Hospital Association, representing over a
hundred hospitals in the Netherlands, has initiated a project aimed to develop a long-term vision on the
future role and position of hospitals. The ‘Hospital of the future’ project has focussed on two areas:
1. The hospital of the future in the Netherlands
Research was conducted in the Netherlands to map the developments in the health care, describing the
effects of trends on curative care and the hospital of the future, developments in ICT, pharmacology
and technology and estimating future capacities.
Approach: desk research & interviews
Creating a vision of the future requires a solid knowledge and understanding of ongoing trends and
developments. Therefore extensive desk research has been performed, focussing on a myriad of topics,
ranging from demographic developments to the latest in pharmacology, from the effects of information
technology to the different concepts on how to organize care and cure processes. Next to desk research,
interviews were held with a large number of specialists working in care and cure sectors.
2. International exploration of future hospital care
Countries around the globe are facing similar healthcare problems to the Netherlands. Yet their
solutions are often quite different. It therefore becomes both important and intriguing to understand the
workings and rationale for different solutions to common problems. Perhaps a best practice case can be
discerned, but it will surely cause one to rethink one’s own solution and allow one to think out of the
box.
Public SPACE, the international knowledge and research center of the Boer & Croon Strategy and
Management Group, has conducted an international search for trends, views and practices related to
hospital care and its future. The international scan has centered on ten countries: Australia, Belgium,
Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the United States.
Approach: correspondents, internet & literature
The international exploration of future hospital care was carried out by using a network of international
correspondents. In each of the selected countries specialists on hospital management and/or health care
were approached for information and references. In addition to the information provided by the
correspondents, general resources (like WHO, OECD, internet, et cetera) and selected literature were
used to create an overview of the present situation, future developments and interesting examples.
Country reports
For each of the countries a country report has been prepared. The country reports are built up in a
similar fashion in order to facilitate comparisons. Our research has centered on the following six topics:
1. The national health system
This section gives a short description of the health system and the position of hospitals and related
care providers within the system.
2. Trends influencing hospitals
This section investigates the trends hospitals are subject to.
Future hospital care
5. Dutch Hospital Association 5
3. The future strategic position of hospitals among other health care providers
This section deals with impeding change of the system in the long run often based on trends within
the country.
4. The future internal organization of hospitals
This section deals with the adaptation of the hospital to new developments and old problems.
5. Interesting examples of futuristic hospitals/cure processes
A section celebrating the implementation of both visionary and innovative thinking.
6. Interesting sites
An overview of interesting websites on hospitals and health care
How to read this document
In chapter 2 OECD figures are presented on the expenditures & investments, resources and utilization
of hospital care for comparison of the ten countries. Chapter 3 subsequently deals with the individual
countries, giving a detailed report on the six topics described above. In Chapter 4 major trends are
deduced from the country reports and emerging patterns for hospital organization are described in three
areas: general trends influencing hospitals; trends on future strategic position of hospitals among other
healthcare providers and trends on the future internal organization of hospitals.
Acknowledgments
This document has been prepared with help of many contributors in the various countries we have
investigated. We owe them our gratitude for their insights and information. We would also like to thank
the European Healthcare Management Association (EHMA), the Standing Committee of the Hospitals
of the E.U. (HOPE), and the International Hospital Federation (IHF) for their valuable contributions.
Public SPACE Dutch Hospital Association
The exploration of future hospital care in The Dutch Hospital Association is
10 countries is performed by Public primarily concerned with advocating the
SPACE, the research and knowledge center collective professional, social and
of the Boer & Croon Strategy and economic interests of its members. Its
Management Group members include all general and specialist
hospitals in the Netherlands. In addition to
Winning strategies for the common good these members the Dutch Hospital
Public SPACE’s mission is the innovative Association has awarded membership to
and sustainable production of the common hospitals in the Dutch Antilles, Aruba and
good by investigating and analyzing the in Suriname. In total there are about 170
dynamics within and between the public members.
and private domains and by developing
constructive partnerships between them. The Dutch Hospital Association aims to
create a framework that allows the
Research & knowledge management hospitals to optimally anticipate and react
Public SPACE offers research and to developments in the need for cure. As
knowledge management for non profits such, the Association develops policies,
(civil or social entepreneurs), government lobbies and negotiates with other important
bodies and private companies. We initiate players in the field of cure. In addition to
international benchmarks, policy research that, the Association supports the
and webenabled project communication. individual members by disseminating
We focus on sectors such as healthcare, information concerning both general and
public transportation, education, utilities specific topics relevant to the hospital
and urban development. sector.
Future hospital care
6. Dutch Hospital Association 6
2. Expenditures, resources and utilization
To introduce hospital care in the selected ten countries, three tables are presented in this chapter. First,
to give an impression of the size of the healthcare sector, figures are presented on the expenditure on
health and the investments in medical facilities.
Please note that the data collected in these tables cannot be compared without keeping in mind that
countries use different statistics and counting methods to calculate the figures presented in the dataset.
Nevertheless, this gives a first impression of the sector and the priorities in various countries.
Table 1: Expenditures & Investments
Total expenditure on health Investment in Medical facilities/per capita
Public Private % of Public Private
Total expenditures expenditures GDP Total investment investment
Australia 1.889 68% 32% 8,3 99 60% 40%
Belgium 2.066 71% 29% 8,6 121
Canada 1.880 70% 30% 9,0 49 84% 16%
France 2.275 78% 22% 9,4 54 100% -
Germany 2.713 77% 23% 10,5 78 100% -
Greece 1.005 55% 45% 8,7 42 26% 74%
Spain 1.001 77% 23% 7,0
Sweden 2.196 84% 16% 8,1 (1996) 96 75% 25%
United Kingdom 1.499 84% 16% 6,7 71 61% 39%
United States 4.015 45% 55% 13,0 70 29% 71%
Netherlands 2.091 69% 31% 8,7 93 - 100%
Figures for 1997 in million US$ 1
Following the general overview of expenditures is a closer look at the resources available in the
countries. A table has been prepared with more detailed information on health care resources, in
particular related to hospital facilities and employees.
Table 2: Resources
Health Employees In patient beds CT scanners MRI units Radiation Therapy
per 1000 per 1000 per million per million per million
population population population population population
Australia 16,9 8,3 (b) 20,8 (b) 2,9 4,9
Belgium - 7,3 - 3,2 6,4
Canada 11,1 4,4 8,2 1,8 7,0
France (a) 18,6 8,6 9,7 2,5 7,8
Germany 10,5 9,4 17,1 6,2 4,6
Greece (a) 7,1 5,0 (a) 6,1 (a) 1,2 -
Spain (a) 9,3 (a) 3,9 9,3 3,3 3,3
Sweden - 4,0 - - -
United Kingdom 22,4 4,4 (c) 5,8 (b) 3,4 3,3
United States 16,2 3,9 13,7 7,6 4,3
Netherlands 9,1 11,3 - (b) 3,9 7,2
Figures for 1997 (a = 1996, b = 1995, c = 1998) 2
1
OECD Health Data 2001
2
OECD (2001)
Future hospital care
7. Dutch Hospital Association 7
The last table generated from the data gathered by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development shows the national differences in use of hopsital services. The table presents ratios on
hospital performance and utilization.
Table 3. Utilization
Beddays Occupancy Turnover rate Staff ratio Admissions
number per % of Cases per Number of staff Per 1000
capita available beds available bed per bed population
Australia 1,0 68,4 40,0 2,40 159,0
Belgium 1,3 77,7 38,1 - (a) 180,0
Canada 1,0 - - - 95,2
France 1,2 75,7 47,1 1,08 205,0
Germany 1,9 80,4 28,1 1,50 196,1
Greece - - - - -
Spain (a) 0,8 (a) 77,3 (a) 35,5 (a) 1,59 (a) 110,0
Sweden (a) 0,8 (a) 77,5 (a) 42,0 - (a) 159,0
United Kingdom 1,0 78,9 55,6 3,60 (a) 214,0
United States 0,7 61,9 36,9 4,44 118,0
Netherlands 1,0 71,4 27,2 2,46 101,3
Figures for 1997, inpatient, acute care (a = 1996) 3
The tables presented above give a general overview of the finance, status and utilization of healthcare
facilities in the selected countries. The Netherlands has been included for comparison reasons only and
will not be included in the country reports. In the following chapter, each of the countries will be
examined in more detail.
3
OECD (2001)
Future hospital care
8. Dutch Hospital Association 8
3. Country reports
Sweden
United
Kindom
Belgium Germany
Canada France
Spain
United States Greece
Australia
Future hospital care
9. Dutch Hospital Association 9
Australia
1. Short description of the national health system 4,5
The Commonwealth currently
has a leadership role in policy
making and particularly in
national issues like public
health, research and national
information management.
The States and Territories are
primarily responsible for the
delivery and management of
public health services and for
maintaining direct relationships
with most health care providers,
including the regulation of
health professionals.
The States and Territories
deliver public acute and psychiatric
hospital services and a wide range of
community and public health services.
The State and Territory governments
directly fund a broad range of health
services. The Commonwealth funds most
medical services out of hospital, and
most health research. The
Commonwealth, States and Territories
jointly fund public hospitals and
community care for aged and disabled persons.
A mix of public and private sector providers delivers health services. There is a large and vigorous
private sector in health services. The Commonwealth Government considers that strong private sector
involvement in health services provision and financing is essential to the viability of the Australian
health system. For this reason the Commonwealth Government provides a 30 percent subsidy to
individuals who acquire private health insurance and has introduced additional arrangements to foster
lifelong participation in private health insurance.
Doctors
The majority of doctors are self-employed. A small segment consists of salaried employees of
Commonwealth, State or local governments. Salaried specialist doctors in public hospitals often have
the right to treat some patients in these hospitals as private patients, charging fees to those patients and
usually contributing some of their fee income to the hospital. Other doctors may contract with public
hospitals to provide medical services. There are many independent pathology and diagnostic imaging
services operated by doctors. For some allied health/paramedical professions, there is a significant
4
Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care (2000a)
5
Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care (2000b)
Future hospital care
10. Dutch Hospital Association 10
number of self-employed. Others are mainly employed by State and local government health
organizations.
Hospitals
Public hospitals include hospitals established by governments and hospitals originally established by
religious or charitable bodies but now directly funded by government. There is a small number of
hospitals built and managed by private firms providing public hospital services under arrangements
with State governments. Most acute care beds and emergency outpatient clinics are in public hospitals.
Large urban public hospitals provide most of the more complex types of hospital care such as intensive
care, major surgery, organ transplants, renal dialysis, and specialist outpatient clinics.
Private hospitals are owned by for-profit or not-for-profit organizations such as large corporate
operators, religious operators, and private health insurance funds. In the past, private hospitals tended
to provide less complex non-emergency care, such as simple elective surgery. However, some private
hospitals are increasingly providing complex, high technology services.
Separate centers for same-day surgery and other non-inpatient operating room procedures are found
mostly in the private sector. Many public hospitals provide such services on the same site as inpatient
care.
The system in brief
The aim of the national health care funding system is to give universal access to health care while
allowing choice for individuals through a substantial private sector involvement in delivery and
financing. The major part of the national health care system is called "Medicare". Medicare provides
high quality health care, which is both affordable and accessible to all Australians, often free of charge
at the point of care. It is financed largely from general tax revenue, which includes a Medicare levy
based on a person’s taxable income. Commonwealth funding for Medicare is mainly provided as:
subsidies for prescribed medicines; substantial grants to State and Territory governments to contribute
to the costs of providing access to public hospitals at no cost to patients; and specific purpose grants to
State/Territory governments and other bodies. State and Territory governments supplement Medicare
funding with their own revenues, mainly for funding public hospitals.
Private health insurance can cover private and public hospital charges (public hospitals charge only
patients who elect to be private patients in order to be treated by the doctors of their choice), and a
portion of medical fees for inpatient services. Non-government religious and charitable organizations
play a significant role in health services, public health and health insurance.
Hospital care under Medicare
All people eligible for Medicare are entitled to a choice of:
free accommodation, and medical, nursing and other care as public patients in State/Territory-
owned hospitals, designated non-government religious and charitable hospitals, or in private
hospitals which have made arrangements with governments to care for public patients; or
treatment as private patients in public or private hospitals, with some assistance from governments.
On admission to public hospitals, patients may choose to be public (Medicare) patients, or private
patients. If they choose to be public patients, they receive free medical and allied health/paramedical
care from doctors nominated by the hospitals, as well as free accommodation, meals and other health
services while in hospital.
Medicare-eligible patients who choose to be private patients in public hospitals are charged fees by
doctors, and are charged by the hospital for hospital care, usually at a rate less than the full cost of
providing these services. If the patient holds private insurance, this will usually cover all or nearly all
of the charges by a public hospital. Medicare pays benefits subsidizing part of the cost of doctors' fees,
and private insurance pays an additional amount towards doctors' fees. Private insurance benefits can
also contribute to payment of the costs of allied health/paramedical and other costs (for example,
surgically implanted prostheses) incurred as part of the hospital stay.
Future hospital care
11. Dutch Hospital Association 11
Patients may choose to be treated in a private hospital. Private patients in private hospitals are charged
fees by doctors and some allied health/paramedical staff, and are billed by the hospital for
accommodation, nursing care and other hospital services such as use of operating facilities. If a patient
holds private insurance it will contribute to these costs. If a patient is eligible for Medicare as a
permanent resident of Australia, the doctors' fees generally attract Medicare benefits.
2. External analysis: trends influencing hospitals 6
Demographic and social trends
Most important is the impact of an aging society. Other trends which will cause changes in the
provision, delivery and nature of health care include: increasing urbanization; changing family
structures; changing ethnic blend; increasing income inequality; and increasing population mobility
which may decrease community support networks.
Information technology
Information technology will create the potential for great improvements in the health system, such as
more informed consumers and providers, better integration and coordination of care, the ability to study
outcomes of care, and the development of a complete, portable medical record. It will also create new
risks: privacy concerns, the heightened expectations of consumers, a revolution in work force
requirements, and new inequalities between those who can use the new technology and those who
cannot or will not.
Consumer demand
Consumer demand for new and more customized health care services will fuel change in the delivery,
presentation and content of health care. Consumers will demand: choice; autonomy in decisions; access
and advice; control of personal information; greater flexibility in the delivery of health services; and
increasingly critical evaluation by consumers of the quality of health care.
Making efficient use of resources
The need to maximize the efficient use of resources will drive changes in the organization and delivery
of health care. Factors that will influence the direction of change include: changes in the relative
contributions of the public and private sectors to the funding and delivery of health services; safety net
service levels as determined by governments and other providers; market forces; substitution between
service types; a recognition that the drive for improvements in health outcomes will not necessarily
lead to cost containment, but might even result in the increase of costs.
Changing patterns of disease
New diseases and environmental threats will create new burdens for health care. These include:
infectious diseases; new, as yet unknown, micro-organisms, together with the problems posed by
increasing antibiotic resistance; problems related to aging; more people with severe disabilities who,
nonetheless, enjoy an increased life-expectancy; cancers; diabetes; and mental illness.
Research and development
Research and development will create the potential for great improvements in the health system, such
as the availability of genetic and other screening tests, better diagnostic tools and more effective
treatments with fewer side effects. But research and development will also create new challenges and
dilemmas, including cost pressures, ethical questions and the need to re-evaluate priorities.
6
Leeder (2000)
Future hospital care
12. Dutch Hospital Association 12
3. The future strategic position of hospitals among other healthcare providers
Health care integration
No longer can hospitals and community ignore one another. Integration has been identified by the
Australian Health Ministers Advisory Council (AHMAC) as a strategic priority for the period 2000-
2005. All Australian health organizations will be involved in the growing movement to integrate health
care delivery at local, state and national level. The Mater hospital – University of Queensland - Center
for General Practice was established in 1994 to research, promote and evaluate care integration
between the Mater hospital and their community. The experiences of the Center in this capacity helped
shape a model of health care integration. This model has provided the foundation for numerous
successful integration activities. 7
Primary Care Initiatives, Coordinated Care Trials
One area where there is scope for doing better is where people receive a number of different services
from different providers. In particular, there are opportunities to offer better care to those with chronic
and complex illnesses through the tailoring of care to meet their needs, particularly through enhanced
coordination in service delivery and by making better use of existing resources. In recent years the
Federal Government has made determined efforts to explore innovative measures that improve care
planning and service delivery for these people. The introduction of the Enhanced Primary Care
Medicare items enable GPs to work with other health care providers to improve their patients' care. For
example, the Hunter Urban Division for General Practice has worked on evidence based care and
improved collaboration with other health care providers. 8,9
4. The future internal organization of hospitals
Health Workforce
The health workforce is mobile, multi-skilled and motivated. It has a primary care focus, supported by
other types of services. The workforce is well educated and involved in continuing education, training
and re-skilling. Much of the workforce is part-time, and some engage and disengage with particular
services as required. They are employable, rather than employed, for life 10 .
Health Management
The health system of 2010 has a new genre of management. There is not just a new situation to address,
but a situation of accelerating change and greater uncertainty. Management addresses this by new types
of planning and research, based on new, higher levels of technology and industry (beyond tertiary and
even quaternary). The capacity of the workforce to keep up with this change and to live with
uncertainty causes particular strains. Leadership skills are vital 11 .
5. Examples of interesting futuristic hospitals/cure processes
National Demonstration Hospitals Program 12,13
The National Demonstration Hospitals Program (NDHP) wants to: reduce clinically inappropriate
waiting times for elective surgery by identifying and disseminating strategies to overcome barriers to
improved management of the whole elective surgery process. Funds were provided directly to hospitals
7
www.uq.edu.au/cgpmh
8
www.health.gov.au/hsdd/primcare/index.htm
9
www.hudgp.org.au
10
Leeder (2000)
11
Leeder (2000)
12
http://www.archi.net.au
13
www.health.gov.au/hsdd/acc/ndhp/index.htm
Future hospital care
13. Dutch Hospital Association 13
that had developed and implemented best practice models in elective surgery management to work with
groups of hospitals seeking to improve their services in similar areas.
NDHP Phase 1 (1995 - 1997)
Projects were funded in three priority areas integral to effective management of elective surgery
including: pre-admission assessment and admission scheduling; operation resources utilization and
scheduling; and discharge care and post discharge planning.
NDHP Phase 2 (1997 - 1998)
Many hospitals did not have systems in place to integrate the management of all admissions (i.e.
emergency and non-emergency medical and surgical admissions). Generic principles for achieving
integrated bed management have been developed.
NDHP Phase 3 (1998 - 2001)
Projects will identify and implement innovative models that improve the quality, coordination and
integration of all services provided by the acute care sector (including pre-admission, ambulatory,
inpatient and post discharge services), and that provide effective two-way links between hospitals and
community providers including GPs.
Australian Resource Center for Hospital Innovations (ARCHI)
Originally established in 1998 as a clearing house for the National Demonstration Hospitals Program
(NDHP) ARCHI promotes the dissemination of information and resources related to innovative health
care delivery both in hospitals and across the community. ARCHI generates information regarding
innovative health care models, activities and practices. This includes care both in hospitals and in the
community. 14
Hospital in the Home
Hospital in the Home (HITH) is the provision of hospital care in the comfort of the person's own home.
Patients are regarded as hospital inpatients and remain under the care of their treating doctor in the
hospital. Patients receive the same treatment that they would have received had they been in a hospital
bed. Patients may be able to receive all their hospital care in HITH or they may have a stay in hospital
and then receive HITH in the latter part of their treatment. Participation in HITH is voluntary - patients
and their carers must agree to have their care provided at home. There are no additional charges to
patients for being in HITH. 15,16
The virtual hospital
Hospitals are changing. Clinical and financial factors are the primary causes forcing change in
hospitals. These changes are in turn compounded by technological, industrial, customer preference and
information technology factors. In reviewing these elements of change, it is easy to argue that the
hospital of the future will be small and extremely “acute” – an emergency service, operating suite, and
intensive care unit(s). Although this may be correct from the viewpoint within a traditional hospital,
from the perspective of the patient or health service manager, a different situation might occur.
The hospital evolves into an organization including multiple campuses and services of diverse types
(clinics, procedure centers, nursing centers of varying acuity, hospital in the home, et cetera) supported
by a mix of facilities and services. These diverse health services are bound together by an information
system serving both patient and organization requirements. The bricks-and-mortar hospital is no longer
the central focus of care. The “solid” remnants of this monolith now merely supports for the
information management system that has become the focus of care. This system, and the management
of it, becomes the “virtual” hospital/health system.
14
www.archi.net.au
15
www.dhs.vic.gov.au/ahs/quality/hith/hith.htm
16
www.health.gov.au/hsdd/acc/ndhp/pubs/hith.htm
Future hospital care
14. Dutch Hospital Association 14
The core business of the new hospital organization is two-fold: (1) Managing patient information
between the various foci of clinical activity that deal with the patient, such as clinics, procedure
centers, or diagnostic services and (2) Assuring appropriate quality and cost of the activity centers of
the organization. (Note this does not necessarily extend to management). 17
Health Information
The health system takes advantage of the opportunities created by information technology. There is a
fully integrated health information system for every individual Australian. The health information
system also has details on services, drugs and appliances, diseases and their treatment, costs, access to
finance and individual eligibility to government and other assistance. The system has intelligence
capacity to enable risk assessment, consideration of cost effectiveness, performance evaluation, and
research and analysis. Consumers have access to all the information they desire for themselves. 18
E-health
The National Office for the Information Economy (NOIE) is active in a variety of e-health projects.
There are considerable opportunities to apply e-commerce to the health sector in Australia. Online
technologies can assist the sector to expand its reach, deepen its quality and usefulness, and improve
the efficiency of delivery. The health sector is also well placed to take advantage of export
opportunities such as the delivery of online health education and telemedicine consultations. Electronic
health (e-health) is much broader than telemedicine or telehealth. It covers the use of digital data
transmitted electronically—for clinical, educational and administrative applications—both locally and
at a distance. Hence, e-health is the overall field that encompasses telemedicine and other
applications. 19
Patient Management
A Patient Management Task Force has been established to undertake review of patient management
practices across the metropolitan public health care system. This group has been set up not just to
gather data, but also to contribute to achieving change. The project incorporates:
a systems approach to review current patient management practices and processes across the health
sector
a collaborative approach that will involve wide consultation with stakeholders, particularly
clinicians and health service management through their representative bodies
an action oriented model of review that will provide short and medium term strategies for change
The Task Force will identify essential patient management practices across the metropolitan public
health care system, identify and prioritize areas of improvement, and make recommendations on
measures (including incentives) to support the necessary change in practice and enable ongoing
monitoring. 20
Travelling to Australia for health care
Because Australia has a high quality health care system, with low costs compared to some other
developed countries, it is an excellent destination for patients seeking treatment which they cannot
access in the country where they live. Eight countries have reciprocal health care agreements with
Australia. These are: Great Britain, Finland, Ireland, Italy, Malta, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and
Sweden. Citizens from these countries are eligible for Medicare assistance for immediately necessary
medical treatment (but not for pre-arranged treatment). Under the agreements hospital treatment is
provided only if the patient elects to be a public patient. 21
With special thanks to Mrs Jane Gilchrist (Victorian Healthcare Association), Mrs Diane Easton
(Australian Resource Center for Hospital Innovations) and Mrs Sue Gray (Healthcare Association of
Western Australia)
17
Kerridge (1998)
18
Leeder (2000)
19
www.noie.gov.au/projects/ecommerce/ehealth/index.htm
20
www.dhs.vic.gov.au/ahs/patman/index.htm
21
Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care (2000a)
Future hospital care
15. Dutch Hospital Association 15
Interesting sites
Australian Department for National Demonstration Australian Resource Center for
Health and Aged Care Hospitals Program Hospital Innovations
www.health.gov.au www.health.gov.au/hsdd/acc/nd www.archi.net.au
hp/index.htm
National Health and Medical Australian Institute of Health University of Queensland -
Research Council (NHMRC) and Welfare (AIHW) Center for General Practice
www.health.gov.au/nhmrc www.aihw.gov.au www.uq.edu.au/cgpmh
Future hospital care
16. Dutch Hospital Association 16
Belgium
1. Short description of the national health system
Federal system
Belgium is a federation and it is divided into
Ministry of social Affairs, Public
three separate language communities: a Flemish, Health and the Environment
French and German community. There is a clear
division of power between the federal Department of Department of
government and the communities. It is the Public Health and Social Affairs
federal government that sets the framework of the Environment
the healthcare sector: it enacts legislation,
National Office
finances infrastructure and expensive medical of Social
equipment and it is responsible for the National Security
National Institute for
health insurance. The communities in turn are Sickness and Invalidity
responsible for the remainder, which includes Insurance
the policy of care in and outside the hospital. 22
Health care services have not yet been Mutualities
decentralized to the federal states, and financing
is still a central government matter. The
National Institute of Sickness and Handicap
Insurance controls the management of the Health care Insured people
providers (patients)
sickness and handicap funds and, with the
Ministry of Health, organizes cost-control and
the levels of reimbursement. The Ministry of
Health decides the budgets for hospitals Communities & regions
according to their activities. However, services
for personal health, disease prevention, domestic
help, occupational health, school health and Funds
ambulatory mental care are the responsibility of Services, regulation, supervision
the provinces or of the localities. 23
The system is characterized by its heterogeneity and fragmentation. Ever since its inception, an
essential principle of the Belgian health care system has been the patient’s freedom of choice between a
wide range of independent providers. The Belgian system is based on a liberal tradition. Thus people
are allowed to freely choose their health care provider who may or may not be a party to a national
agreement. They have direct access to the hospital. This tradition is supported by a system that
facilitates over-supply of health care providers due to the absence of systemic planning of manpower.
As such there is a high density of health care providers and waiting lists are scarce. Health care is
therefore privately managed and delivered (mainly by a range of non-profit organizations) while
responsibility for the funding of health care and oversight of its organization are in the public sector,
and are shared amongst numerous public authorities. 24
Healthcare structure
The tasks of primary and secondary care are not well defined, which results in overlapping activities
and competition among physicians. Patients can visit general practitioners or specialists in their
surgeries but can also visit a specialist in the hospital or in a polyclinic. No referral is needed to gain
access to specialist services, or hospital so many specialist provide primary care, including outpatient
22
UN: Agenda 21.
23
WHO Regional Office for Europe & European Commission (1997)
24
European Observatory on health care systems (2000)
Future hospital care
17. Dutch Hospital Association 17
perinatal health care, outpatient mental health care, medical services for industry and care of the
handicapped. Medical care outside hospitals is provided by numerous general practitioners (GPs) and
by specialists working alone. However, there are centers, known as integrated health care practices,
which operate a multidisciplinary team, including several general practitioners, nurses, administrative
staff, et cetera.
Home care is a high priority in Belgium and the country has a well developed system of community
nursing services. The most important organization is the White and Yellow Cross, a national federation
with 9 provincial associations and 180 local branches. 25
Hospital care
The government plans global hospital capacity, in the sense that hospitals must obtain accreditation
form the Ministry of Public Health to operate a certain number of beds for each service category (e.g.
acute care, surgery, maternity). The accreditation is granted by the Ministry of Public Health only if a
proposal (for hospital opening, extension or alteration) respects national planning. There are a variety
of accreditation norms. Organizational norms relate to staff requirement and responsibilities, hygiene,
ethics requirements; architectural criteria concern the number, size, comfort, hygiene of hospital rooms;
functional standards refer to convenience, accessibility, et cetera; additional norms relating to minimum
activity, e.g. they stipulate that hospitals should have no fewer than 150 beds, diagnosis/surgical units
no fewer than 30 beds, and they set minimum facility standards and expected staff numbers. 26
Hospitals’ capital planning is dealt with separately. The regions and the federal government have
together drafted a building program, with the aim of controlling capital expenditure. Some high
technology medical services are also subject to planning and accreditation. The federal authorities fix
the appropriate quantity of equipment for different areas of the country.
Hospitals are divided into two categories: psychiatric and general hospitals. The general category is
divided into:
acute care hospitals (80%)
geriatric hospitals (4%)
specialist hospitals (16%)
Specialist hospitals specialize in cardiopulmonary diseases, locomotive diseases, neurological
disorders, palliative care, chronic diseases and psycho-geriatric care. There are nine university
hospitals, which have special status due to their teaching and research functions. 27
Hospitals Number Beds
Acute 177 57,532
Long-term 70 16,684
Total 247 74,216
Public and private
About 60% of Belgium’s hospitals are non-profit private institutions, and the rest are public
institutions. There are very few private for-profit hospitals. Public hospitals are often owned by the
public municipal welfare centers. Ambulatory care is mainly organized by an important independent
private sector, while most hospital care is provided by private non-profit hospitals supplemented by
public hospitals. Many of the Belgian institutions are rooted on religious or ideological beliefs. Not
only are the social insurance funds organized on a religious, non-profit private basis, hospitals and
home care organizations are similarly rooted in such beliefs. This means that many organizations have
a private or semiprivate structure even though they are funded via national healthcare insurance. 28
25
WHO Regional Office for Europe & European Commission (1997)
26
WHO Regional Office for Europe & European Commission (1997)
27
WHO Regional Office for Europe & European Commission (1997)
28
WHO Regional Office for Europe & European Commission (1997)
Future hospital care
18. Dutch Hospital Association 18
2. External analysis: trends influencing hospitals
Science for greying population and chronic patients
Progress in medical science is enormous and efforts have to be made to make technological innovations
available to the population. New technology will be essential for coping with the increasing demand
from an aging population and the increase of chronic patients. 29
Access to care
The access to care will have to be ensured and improved. Insufficient public funding and the
privatization of care bear the risk of excluding a (growing) number of people from adequate health
care. As many other countries in Europe, Belgium is faced with ever growing budgetary problems. The
question revolves around cost containment and raising sufficient funds to cover the public share of the
health care bill. In addition, the system is inefficient due to its oversupply of healthcare services. The
aging population will cause a substantial structural cost increase. That such a development would make
it even more difficult for Belgium to continue its current expenditure is obvious when one keeps in
mind the large state deficit and the problems of pension funding in the coming years. 30
3. The future strategic position of hospitals among other healthcare providers
Division of tasks
If a hospital doesn’t have all programs a patient might need, patients will have to be sent to another
hospital or health care provider that is able to provide an integrated care package. Therefore hospitals
should cooperate and divide tasks. This cooperation is best implemented in networks of hospitals.
Transmural care will be encouraged to facilitate a smooth transition between hospital care and home
care. 31
Interhospital alliance for infrastructural cooperation (IRIS)
A group of public hospitals formed an alliance in order to build a network of public hospitals in
Brussels open to anyone who needs medical treatment. The network and associate hospitals will have
to develop sound financial systems. The alliance intends to deliver medical services of a high quality.
The hospitals have legal and financial autonomy but are governed by an association. Important areas of
cooperation are: implementation of new management techniques, cooperation of medical and logistical
operations, increase efficiencies in logistics, introduce new work methods, create a common medical
policy, explore the use of information technology, improve overall service and improve the image and
attractiveness of alliance. 32
4. The future internal organization of hospitals
Patient as focus point
The objective is to make the patient the focus of all medical and related (care) activities. In other
words: to provide individualized care in all phases of a patient’s illness. This approach blurs
professional and organizational boundaries. The approach is interdisciplinary with consultation of
patients in both the preventive and curative phases. 33
29
Vandenbroucke (2000a)
30
Vandenbroucke (2000a)
31
Vandenbroucke (2000b)
32
www.iris-hopitaux.be
33
Vandenbroucke (2000b)
Future hospital care
19. Dutch Hospital Association 19
A new organization for hospitals
A patient oriented approach requires the development of a coherent organization of hospitals and the
development of regional programs for continuity in the overall provision of care. Hospital organization
should be strengthened. The organization should be changed from a vertical to a horizontal structure in
which various medical disciplines are working together on care programs. 34
Regulating supply and ‘end of service’
To limit both the entry of new physicians and the number of older physicians, supply and ‘end of
service’ will be regulated. The objective is to redistribute labor and to create opportunites for
younger physicians. This means that in 2004 only 700 positions will be availble, 650 in 2005 and
600 the year after. Concerning ‘end of service’ the physicians will be forced to stop working at the
age of 67. 35
Evaluating medical practice
Medical practices will be evaluated through a system of ‘Peer Review’. Physicians will participate
in the evaluation system. Accreditation will be made conditional of the participation. 36
Evidence-based medicine
The need to constantly improve the quality of care will require the development of procedures and
standards that will be applicable to all medical activities. These protocols will facilitate and enhance
medical operations. 37
Corporate governance
Hospitals will have to adapt their corporate governance to new criteria in work and quality. Four major
themes for the future are:
redefining the role, position and work methods of governing bodies
professionalizing functions and appointments
positioning of medical staff in policy making
improving quality of information, transparency and management 38
Mobility
It is important to increase the exchange of knowledge and skills between the personnel of different
departments and hospitals. To this end, employees may go to work in another hospitals (in a group),
either temporarily to train or conduct research, or on a longer-term basis. In order to encourage career
prospects between hospitals, working conditions should be made as uniform as possible. The
simplification of titles and qualifications, a clear allocation of powers and responsibilities, motivational
evaluations and training opportunities are the key features of a modern staff policy in the hospitals. the
modernization in managing human resources.
Ongoing education
Employees should keep a very close eye on the latest developments. By regularly attending seminars in
Belgium or abroad and using the knowledge they acquire, they will be able to benefit their particular
hospital and network.
34
Vandenbroucke (2000b)
35
Colla (1996)
36
Colla (1996)
37
Vandenbroucke (2000b)
38
Belgian Hospital Association (2001)
Future hospital care
20. Dutch Hospital Association 20
5. Examples of interesting futuristic hospitals/cure processes
The nursing wards
The nursing care at the acute hospital bed will intensify, thus requesting more skills and
professionalism of the nurse. Already, in a number of instances, has the concept of nursing floors,
grouping and systematizing e.g. 4 nursing units of about 30 beds each, proved to be the innovative idea
in ward planning for the nineties and probably beyond. Several time and cost consuming functions, as
e.g. supply, paramedic provisions, night-supervision, are shared by the four or two-by-two nursing
units on the same floor. At the University Hospital Gasthuisberg (Leuven, Belgium) an assessment of
direct nursing costs showed a decrease of 20 to 25 % at ward-level after moving to the new facilities. 39
Stimulating group practices
The importance of group practices (in primary care) will be increased. With the increased complexity
of care more global and integrated services will have to be deliverd. The integrated health care
practices operate a multidisciplinary team, including several general practitioners, nurses,
administrative staff, a physiotherapist and a psychotherapist. These practices will be characterized by:
accessibility: services close to the patients
continuous care: permanent access, 24 hours a day
polyvalency: Small diversified team (interdisciplinair and intradisciplinair) 40
39
www.uzleuven.be; http://users.tijd.com/~tdn17428/hospital.html
40
Aelvoet (1999)
Future hospital care
21. Dutch Hospital Association 21
Interesting sites
Ministerie van Sociale Zaken, Belgische Vereniging der Universitaire Ziekenhuizen
Volksgezondheid en Leefmilieu Ziekenhuizen Leuven
www.health.fgov.be www.hospitals.be www.uzleuven.be
Medinet Info-Santé web Belgian Medcare
www.medinet.be www.sesa.ucl.ac.be/infosante www.belgianmedcare.com
Interhospitalenkoepel van de
regio voor infrastructurele
samenwerking
www.iris-hopitaux.be
Future hospital care
22. Dutch Hospital Association 22
Canada
1. Short description of the national health system
Most health care in Canada is publicly financed, but delivered privately. Medicare provides access to
universal, comprehensive coverage for medically necessary hospital, inpatient and outpatient physician
services. Health care is financed primarily through taxation, in the form of provincial and federal
personal and corporate income taxes. In Canada, governments act as the payer, and for insured hospital
and medical services they are the sole payer. The private sector’s role as a payer is limited to those
services, which are not completely covered by provincial health programs. The health care payers in
the private sector include private insurance companies, employers who provide supplementary health
benefits and individuals who pay for supplementary health care out-of-pocket. 41
General practitioners
General practitioners (GPs) and family physicians are usually the first contact with the formal health
care system and control access to most specialists, many allied providers, admissions to hospitals at
which they have admitting privileges, et cetera. Most GPs are private practitioners work in community
health centers, hospital-based group practices or work in affiliation with hospital outpatient
departments, but enjoy a high degree of autonomy. 42
Physicians are remunerated on a fee-for-service basis by provincial health insurance plans, though a
trend is developing toward salaried remuneration of specialists in teaching hospitals and capitation for
primary care providers. 43
Spread of general practitioners
Until recently, general practitioners were free to practice where they preferred. This has lead to an
oversupply of physicians in urban areas, and a chronic shortage in rural and northern areas. In response,
a number of provinces have introduced or consider supply restrictions in urban areas, incentive systems
for rural doctors, or a mandatory time period in rural practice for foreign physicians.44
Many specialists maintain private practices and often have a staff appointment in a hospital or an
affiliation with a hospital outpatient clinic.
Hospital care
Over 95% of Canadian hospitals are operated as private non-profit entities run by community boards or
trustees, voluntary organizations or municipalities. Hospitals have control of the day-to-day allocation
of resources provided they stay in within the operating budgets established by the regional or provincial
health authorities. Hospitals are primarily accountable to the communities they serve, not to the
provincial bureaucracy. The for-profit hospital sector comprises mostly long-term care facilities or
specialized services such as addiction centers. 45
Hospitals are typically organized as general or acute care facilities, community or secondary care, and
long-term or chronic care. Depending on affiliation with a medical school, any of these hospitals may
also be classified as a teaching hospital. In larger centers, hospitals may be more specialized as
41
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:6)
42
Health Canada (1999)
43
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:7)
44
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:23)
45
Health Canada (1999)
Future hospital care
23. Dutch Hospital Association 23
maternity hospitals, children’s hospitals, rehabilitation facilities or cancer treatment centers. In the
largest cities, some institutions have become highly specialized, with hospitals focused on arthritis care,
orthopedics and women’s health. Many highly specialized services are being consolidated in single
urban centers with service the entire province or region. 46
Health institutions 1994
- Hospitals 1167
- Other institutions 6087
Spread of hospital facilities
To a large degree, the geographical distribution of hospital facilities has been influenced by two
factors. The first is that the majority of Canada’s population lives within 150 km of the border with the
United States. This concentration of the population has limited the need to build a highly dispersed
system. The second is that funding for hospital development was relatively easy. Thus, a large number
of hospitals were built to cover the population. Provinces with a rural base tended to build a large
network of smaller hospitals throughout the province, many of which are now closing or being
converted to community health centers. More recent population shifts have put pressure on the existing
distribution of hospitals, particularly in highly urbanized areas. 47
2. External analysis: trends influencing hospitals
There is a growing comprehension of a change in future population health needs, and an understanding
of the actual impact of health care on the population’s general health status. This is causing a shift of
focus away from the health care system towards the health system, which thus acknowledges that
health is more than health care. The focus shifts to integrated community based models which place
increased emphasis on health promotion and prevention; and by developing strategies for the
coordinated management of the health care workforce, including the remuneration, geographical
distribution and appropriate use of various health care providers. 48
Technological advances have made possible the provision of many hospital services in private clinics.
The number of private clinics providing services such as eye surgery, abortions and hernia repair has
been increasing over the last few years. 49
Hospitals and health care providers are operating in an environment of dynamic change. Key forces of
change include: consumer attitudes, expectations and behavior; information and medical technology;
and science and health research. 50
Key forces of change and innovation
Trends and changes in consumer attitudes and behaviors and their impact of health and health care:
increasing awareness that people have choices and can influence their own health
increased spending on alternative treatments and medicine and well-being
increased desire for boutique-shopping in health care and customized, hassle-free service
Trends and changes in information technology and their impact of health and health care:
move toward non-traditional delivery settings (remote, home care, etc. supported by technology)
increasing research opportunities due to improving databases
increasing control over access to personal records for consumers
46
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:25)
47
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:25)
48
Health Canada (1999)
49
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:25)
50
Ontario Hospital Association (2001), The Change Foundation (2000)
Future hospital care
24. Dutch Hospital Association 24
Trends and changes in science and technology and their impact of health and health care:
more emphasis on preventive care capabilities and complexity of ethical issues
increased demand for innovative health care services increase the need for change management
hospital increasingly tied to science and technology and the research and development cycle
3. The future strategic position of hospitals among other healthcare providers
Health networks
Through voluntary and collaborative efforts, a number of Ontario health care organizations have, over
recent years, demonstrated the creativity and capacity to evolve into health networks. The health
networks approach to health care reform offers a promising avenue for the achievement of long-term
health system integration, proceeding on a consensual basis and treating participants as equals. More
integration appears to have taken place in terms of horizontal integration, clinical and non-clinical
programs and management. A health network is a community-led health care system that is focused on
the integration of four key cornerstones of care, namely: hospitals, long-term care facilities, home care,
and physicians’ offices/clinics. 51,52
More and more hospitals across Ontario have developed strategic alliances with one another and with
other health care providers, such as physician’s practices, long-term care and home care. These new
‘health networks’ have resulted in improved integration of patient care. In addition, hospitals are
evolving into new health enterprises, ranging from specialized centers of excellence to general care
centers. Critical to these changes is the adoption of new information and communications technology
that will allow hospitals to deliver patient care anywhere the patient is residing – at home, in the
workplace or while on vacation. 53
Future hospital-community interface
An integrating model for addressing the interface between in-hospital and in-home services, with four
key players: hospitals, Community Care Access Centers (CCAC), home care provider agencies and
physicians. Opportunities: develop joint training and education opportunities; develop cross-boundary
clinical pathways; develop new collaborative service offerings; promote staff movement across
boundaries; compete with community service providers in bidding for CCAC contracts (CCAC are
submitted to managed competition and get concessions for a limited period of time); and make
arrangements with service providers for designated client groups. 54
Vertically integrated health systems
Partners For Health consists of a group of health care agencies working together to plan and coordinate
services for the Southeast Toronto community. Service sectors include: public health, primary care and
prevention, acute care, rehabilitation, in-home support and long-term care. The initiative focuses on
vertical integration intended to facilitate easier access to services for patients, the consumers can move
more easily between sectors and within sectors. The partners include: the community (hospital
catchment area); Toronto East General and Orthopedic Hospital; South Riverdale Community Health
Center; and other affiliate members. 55
Partners For Health is a unique model for integrated health systems:
it focuses on health promotion and prevention of illness
the funding model is designed to keep savings in the community
geographical coverage to address the specific needs of a defined population
the planning approach is needs-based
the East York Community Development Council provided strong sponsorship for the process
51
Ontario Hospital Association & KPMG (1998), www.oha.com
52
Ontario Hospital Association (2000), www.oha.com
53
Ontario Hospital Association (2001)
54
Ontario Hospital Association (1998)
55
www.changefoundation.com
Future hospital care
25. Dutch Hospital Association 25
Managing the Transition from Hospital to Home
Bridge to Home provides furnished accommodation in Housing Authority buildings with volunteer
supported services, free of charge to guests who would otherwise stay in hospitals. The Bridge to Home
differs significantly from other models because it uses less expensive nursing or retirement home
facilities. Bridge to Home is an innovative partnership led by a hospital, a home care provider and a
Community Care Access Center. The patients share the need for a supported environment for a
transition period in which to regain their strength and confidence. 56
Multi-Site, Multi-Service Organization
From a hospital center in Nipigon, Nipigon District Memorial Hospital operates a range of acute, long-
term car and community outreach programs. It operates nursing/medical centers in three other
communities. The Nipigon District Memorial Hospital is an example of a Multi-Site, Multi-Service
Organization. The extent and range of services and alliances that this small hospital has developed are
services offered within the hospital facility ranging from inpatient services, emergency services to
home care nursing and a diabetic clinic. The hospital also provides enhanced services (other
community outreach programs): a service for those requiring transport, telephone assurance, meals-on-
wheels (delivering meals to home), wheels-to-meals (bringing clients to meals in the hospital), and
ambulance services. 57
4. The future internal organization of hospitals
Capital budgets
The most important distinction in the financing of hospitals in the separation of operating budgets form
capital budgets. Capital projects and the purchase of capital equipment is closely controlled and only
partially funded by the provinces. The residual funds are raised within each community as capital needs
are identified and approved. As a result, most hospitals maintain a fundraising arm or foundation to
provide an ongoing fund pool for capital purchases. Decisions on capital spending are reached through
a separate process which involves negotiation between hospital boards, provinces, providers, and
increasingly, citizens. 58
Acute care system succeeds with private bond issue
A Canadian healthcare provider (Toronto Hospital, now Toronto University Health Network) raised a
significant sum of money from the sale of bonds. Institutional investors - primarily U.S. and Canadian -
liked the deal so much that was oversubscribed. With bond proceeds and private donations, the hospital
will rebuild two of its three campuses. 59
Entrepreneurial spirit
For some, private health care ventures include opening food franchises on hospital campuses, operating
parking lots and turning hospital lobbies into a type of shopping mall. For others, it means partnerships
to provide home-care services, acquiring laboratories or venturing into the e-health business. The drive
is to seek new sources of funding. 60
Internet
For example a patient in the U.S. or anywhere in the world could undergo magnetic resonance imaging,
an X-ray or other diagnostic test in his of her own country and have it read via the internet at a
Canadian doctor’s computer screen, for a fee.
56
Woods (2001), www.oha.com
57
www.changefoundation.com
58
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:35)
59
Pallarito (1999)
60
Priest (2000)
Future hospital care
26. Dutch Hospital Association 26
5. Examples of interesting futuristic hospitals/cure processes
Ontario hospitals embrace e-learning solutions
More and more Ontario hospitals are embracing the groundbreaking advantages of e-learning for health
care professionals. e-learning occurs when educational content is delivered and supported by electronic
networks, such as the internet, intranet, broadcast media (e.g., satellite) and other content delivery
mechanisms. e-learning is considered to be a powerful tool to recruit and retain health care workers in
Ontario, e-learning is a cost-effective way to deliver real-time learning to their employees. The
advantage of e-learning is that it provides the right content at the right time. It can cater to any size
audience, anywhere in Canada, or the world for that matter. 61
Hospital report cards
A system cannot be improved unless you first measure how well it is performing. By publishing a
comprehensive hospital specific report card (including clinical utilization and outcomes, patient
satisfaction, financial performance and conditions and system change and integration), quality of care
is measured and greater accountability is promoted. 62
One-stop-shopping
The growth area in community care is the home-care sector, as there is increasing interest in, and need
for, services provided outside institutions. Community home care may take many forms, ranging from
physician visits, specialized nursing care and homemaker services to meals-on-wheels programs and
adult day care. As these services tend to be provided by many different organizations, some provinces
have begun to offer one-stop-shopping by organizing these services around one access point. 63
Quick response teams
Some provinces have introduced with quick response teams to redirect elderly and chronically ill
patients out of acute institutions and into community based home-care programs (to contain cost and to
facilitate care at home). 64
Virtual organization (a program based network) – www.echn.ca
When plans for a freestanding children's hospital for Northern Alberta did not prove economically
feasible, a multi-disciplinary multi-site, program-based network or 'virtual organization' was
established. The Children's Health Center (CHC) of Northern Alberta manages children's health care in
acute hospitals in Edmonton and the surrounding region. It bases its operations on programs rather than
facilities to create a network of child health services within existing facilities. The rationale for the
regionalization of pediatric care included improving quality, achieving better coordination for access to
the system by families and care providers and creating financial efficiencies. Although pediatric
facilities are being developed and operated from five existing hospitals, the facilities are owned and the
staff is employed by the host hospitals, one Board is responsible for children's acute care hospital
services in Edmonton. The Board has control over the budget, medical staff, and the type of program
and service volumes at each site. 65
With special thanks to Mr Steve Orsini (Ontario Hospital Association), Mrs Elizabeth Dickson
(Canadian Institutes of Health Research) and Mrs Karin McCarthy (Canadian Institute for Health
Information)
61
Bryans (2001), www.oha.com
62
Ontario Hospital Association (2001), www.oha.com
63
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:29)
64
WHO Regional office for Europe (1996:29)
65
www.changefoundation.com , www.echn.ca
Future hospital care
27. Dutch Hospital Association 27
Interesting sites
Health Canada Online Canadian Health Network Ontario Hospital Association
www.hc-sc.gc.ca Www.canadian-health- www.oha.com
network.ca
University Health Network The Change Foundation Electronic Child Health
Network
http://www.uhn.ca/home.htm Www.changefoundation.com www.echn.ca
Future hospital care
28. Dutch Hospital Association 28
France
1. Short description of the National health care system
The French health care system is a social
Public + private hospitals = 508075 beds (1997)
insurance (social security) system. The system is
characterized by a powerful government role in
assuring universal coverage and regulating. The Public Private
64,7% 35,3%
Ministry of Employment and Solidarity
monitors the activities of twenty-two regional
health planning-inspectorate bodies (DRASS) en General Psychiatric Psychiatric General
through the latter, similar bodies in ninety-six hospitals hospitals hospitals hospitals
departments (DDASS). New regional PPHS*
institutions, the Regional Hospitalization 56,8% 7,8% 1,7% 33,6%
Agencies (ARH), created in 1996 and also under
responsibility of the government, are involved in Non Non For
the planning and financing of the hospital profit profit profit
services within the region. GLOBAL PPHS no
BUDGET PPHS
The health care system is a public/private mix, 8,8% 5,1% 19,7%
with ambulatory care mainly private and a
dominant public sector for hospital care. * PPHS: participating in Public Hospital Servic
Hospital care is mixed. Public facilities account
for 65 percent of hospital beds. Both public and private sectors include general and specialized
hospitals. 66
Public hospitals have three functions: preventive and curative care and rehabilitation. Medium- and
long-stay hospitals are devoted to follow-up treatment and also look after patients who can no longer
live alone. However, as in most European countries, despite a major effort to develop alternative
solutions to long-term hospital stays, general hospitals still have an important, if ill measured, medi-
social function. 67
The hospital sector is characterized by market institutional rigidities. Whereas to a large extent private
clinics come under private law – and in a way are like business – hospital are run more like public
administrations. Private clinics respond rapidly to changes in financial and economic incentives, and
underwent sweeping reorganization during the 1990s. In contrast, in public hospitals, a set of
administrative rules constrains decision making, making it difficult to reach optimal decisions.
The first factor of rigidity is that the conditions of service of hospital staff are governed by general
rules set for the entire civil service, including those that apply to recruitment, redundancies, promotion
and wage setting. Furthermore, mobility between hospitals is particularly low. Hospital doctors are
appointed directly by the Ministry to a particular hospital and specialization, which in effect makes it
difficult to move them in the event of reorganization. A second element of institutional rigidity is the
fact that hospital boards are chaired by the local mayor. As a hospital is usually the main provider of
jobs in the area in which it is situated, local authorities have a direct interest in keeping it there. Thirdly
the accounting procedure used by hospitals has shortcomings. While hospitals enjoy certain
derogations form public accounting, such as the right to make depreciation allowances, their
accounting procedures do not give them an exact picture of their activity from the point of view of
assets. At the central level, it is difficult to obtain a precise picture even of the land area occupied by
hospitals in France. 68
66
French Hospital Federation (????:1-13)
67
WHO Regional Office for Europe & European Commission (1997:34)
68
Imai, Jacobzone & Lenain (2000:23-24)
Future hospital care
29. Dutch Hospital Association 29
2. External analysis: trends influencing hospitals
Hospitals, facing growing recruitment problems, need to be more active in promoting their activity
towards younger generations. 69
Another important issue is the implementation of the 35 hours workweek legislation in the public
sector which has already been implemented in the private sector.
3. The future strategic position of hospitals among other healthcare providers
Health networks
The object is to set up treatment and care networks, improving coordination between the health care
services and between the health and social sectors and reinforcing collaboration between the public and
private hospitals. The care networks, often introduced without conceiving what such structures may
imply, can be organized either in the private practice frame, with the ‘city network’, or in the hospital
basis, with the hospital networks. In both cases, the networks can include practitioners and institutions.
The boundaries between ambulatory care and hospital are changing, but it is still a marginal change. 70
4. The future internal organization of hospitals
Management focus
Hospitals will no longer be bureaucratic institutions, as they still are in some countries. They will be
management focused. After having been administered directly by the State authorities, the last step to
decentralization and professionalization of management will be made. 71
Public health focus?
Hospitals will not be asked to do everything and the question is if they should be health promoters?
This role depends on the level reached by the health care system. Hospitals are useful where they are
adding value. They are not supposed to do what others can do better. Although the length of stay is still
decreasing, hospitals will of course remain a place of cure. The demise of the hospital is not
foreseeable. 72
Patient focus
Hospitals will consider themselves and will be considered by others to be a constructive part of the
global health system. To view the patient as the center of a process of care is for hospitals the way of
the future. Hospitals will become members of health networks, sometimes but not always organized by
themselves. If not, they won’t be able to exist any longer. Some of them will disappear because they
won’t have been able to weave links with the other hospitals and the other professionals. 73
Social focus
Hospitals will remain a key social actor. Western European countries know it already; they have to
meet a role they thought they would not see any more. Urban societies have created exclusion and a
new poverty, this population will find in hospitals what the word originally meant: hospitality.
Hospitals may be the first actor of the crisis reduction in our different countries. 74
69
Vincent (2001)
70
French Hospital Federation (????:40)
71
Vincent (2001)
72
Vincent (2001)
73
Vincent (2001)
74
Vincent (2001)
Future hospital care
30. Dutch Hospital Association 30
5. Examples of interesting futuristic hospitals/cure processes
Health cards
Smart cards in France go back to their original development by Roland Moreno in 1974. The Carte
Sante (health card) was launched in 1990 by the mutual insurance companies, with 250 000 cards
issued and 1000 readers provided in medical practices in 1992. The system shows the trend towards
convergence between medical and financial applications. The card is part administrative and part
medical record. The administrative data include personal, social security, and health insurance
contributions details as well as acting as a means for paying for health services. The medical record
includes emergency data as well as some ongoing health records. At the core of the system is a
processing center which manages the financial transactions, contributions from patients, and payments
to providers as well as collecting some updated medical data. The current plan is to issue some 600 000
health professional cards and 50 million patient cards by the end of 1998 in the Sesam Vitale program.
The main force behind this initiative is the electronic management of payments, although limited
medical records will still be carried. 75
Develop tools of evaluation and performance measurement
Quality certification procedures have been developed as from the late 1990s. Care quality evaluation
was made compulsory in 1991 and a special research fund was wet up for the purpose. The Agence
Nationale d’Accréditation et d’Évaluation en Santé, officialy created in 1996, has seen its activities and
resources enlarged. It is now, after AHCRQ (Agency for Health Care Research and Quality) in the
United States one of the leading agencies of this type in the world. It takes part in the development of
evidence-based medicine by way of close contacts with expert panels and medical journals. It evaluates
medical technologies and will soon take over the process of accreditation of hospital services. 76
Georges Pompidou
The establishment of the Georges Pompidou European
hospital in the Paris region is geared to future developments
in the field of hospital care. The hospital operates on the
basis of three clinical centers (emergencies/networks,
oncology/specialisms, cardio-vascular) and on three medico-
technical centers (biology/pharmacy/blood, imaging and
anesthetics – resuscitation). This new hospital plans to provide targeted health care in those areas where
demand is high and/or research and technical equipment are already highly advanced. However, it is an
integral part of the strategic development of networks since it must have links to the overall health care
matrix in the form of contractual ties covering psychiatry, neuro surgery, head and neck surgery and
vasculo-cerebal traumas. This is the shape of the emerging large-scale centers of hospitals excellence
where intervention will be limited to specific fields and as a result there will be a catchment area for
patients that will extend beyond the traditional geographical regions that the hospital formerly served. 77
With special thanks to Mr. Pascal Garel (French Hospital Federation)
75
Neame (1997)
76
Imai, Jacobzone & Lenain (2000:29)
77
Palm, Nickless, Lewalle & Coheur (2000:143)
Future hospital care
31. Dutch Hospital Association 31
Interesting sites
Sante.fr Ministere de l’Emploi et de la
Solidarité
www.sante.fr www.sante.gouv.fr/index.htm
Research and Information l'Agence d'Accréditation et French Hospital Federation
Center For Health Economics d'Evaluation en Santé
www.credes.fr www.anaes.fr www.fhf.fr
Future hospital care
32. Dutch Hospital Association 32
Germany
1. Short description of the national health system
Germany does not have one budget for health care. Instead, there are 17 tax-based budgets (one at
federal level and 16 at Länder level) and currently 453 sickness fund budgets (not counting other social
insurance budgets, reimbursement through private health insurance companies, et cetera). The sickness
funds do not have fixed pre-determined budgets, but they have to cover all the expenses of their insured
members. The 453 sickness funds have about 72 million insured persons and the 52 private health
insurance companies are covering around 7,1 million fully insured people.
The hospitals have dual financing: financing of investment costs through the Länder and of running
costs through the sickness funds (plus private patients). The running costs include all personnel costs,
as hospital physicians are salaried employees of the hospitals. The heads of medical departments
usually have the right to charge private patients for medical services on top of the hospital charges. In
order to be eligible for investment costs, hospitals have to be listed in the hospital plans, which are set
by the Länder.
The Länder governments are responsible for maintaining hospital infrastructure. They attempt to fulfill
this duty through hospital plans and funding the hospital investments outlined in those plans. The
investments are paid for independently of actual ownership of the hospitals and according to the
priorities of the Länder government.
Privatization is another important feature of the German health care system. Some health care sectors
are in fact based entirely on private providers, e.g. the office-based ambulatory and dental care sectors.
In other sectors, both private no-profit and for-profit providers co-exist with public providers, e.g. in
the hospital sector (with a trend toward more privatization). 78
Development of the public-private mix in ownership of general hospitals 1990-1998
Beds % share 1990 1998
Public 62,8 55,3
Non-for-profit 33,5 37,9
Private 3,7 6,8
Germany has no gatekeeping system; instead the patients are free to select a sickness-fund-affiliated
doctor of their choice.
Primary and secondary ambulatory health care
All ambulatory care, including both primary care and outpatient secondary care, has been organized
almost exclusively on the basis of office-based physicians. The majority of physicians have a solo
practice – only around 25% share a practice. The premises, equipment and personnel are financed by
the physicians. Ambulatory physicians offer almost all specialties.
Around 5% of all office-based physicians have the right to treat patients inside the hospital. All other
physicians transfer their patients to hospital physicians for inpatient treatment and receive them back
after discharge, i.e. post-surgical care is usually done by office-based physicians and not by the hospital
surgeons. In addition to the office-based physicians, around 11.000 other physicians are accredited to
treat ambulatory patients. 79
78
European Observatory on health care systems (2000)
79
European Observatory on health care systems (2000:59)
Future hospital care
33. Dutch Hospital Association 33
Secondary and tertiary hospital care
German hospitals concentrate on inpatient care. Only university hospitals have formal outpatient
facilities, originally for research and teaching purposes. Recently, their role in providing highly
specialized care on an ambulatory basis (e.g. for outpatient chemotherapy) has been recognized through
special contacts with the sickness funds. Day surgery is another new area for German hospitals.
Hospitals in 1999 80 2.252
General hospitals 2.014
- Public 753
- Non-for-profit 832
- Private 429
Hospitals
There were 2252 hospitals in Germany in 1999 with a total number of 565,000 beds. Between 1991 and
1998, the number of beds per 1000 in the western part of Germany decreased from 8.2 to 7.0 (-14.4%),
in the eastern part even from 8.9 to 6.8 (-23.7%). Trends between public and private for-profit hospitals
differed dramatically, however: -24% vs. +58% (with not-for-profits at –2%). While average length of
stay fell from 14.3 to 10.8 days (-24.4%) and from 16.1 to 10.5 days (-34.8%) respectively, the number
of admissions per capita increased by 8.4% and 29.0% respectively. Until 1997, the net effect on bed-
days was negative as well (-15.3%/ -19.8%) but stabilized in 1998. It is likely that the number of cases
will continue to increase while length of stay will continue to decrease. 81
Regulation of the hospital sector follow a ‘dual planning’ approach: the number of hospitals and
hospital beds is planned at the state level. Staff planning and the number of hospital days to be
provided are negotiated between hospital owners and sickness funds within the framework of
negotiating per diem charges. 82
Hospital staffing
While the number of hospital physicians continues to increase (1991-98: +10.5%), the number of
nurses reached its peak in 1995 after a strong 10.2% growth in four years which was mainly due to the
legal link between the required nursing time documentation and the resulting number of nursing jobs
between 1993 and 1995. Since 1995, the number has declined slowly (by 2.4% until 1998). The
number of other personnel declined during all of the 90s (1991-98: -6.2%) so that the overall skills mix
is changing. The turnaround in nursing personnel coincides also with the partial introduction of
prospective payments in 1996 and in costs per hospital case (1995-98: -2.9% in the western part). It is
likely that the hospital workforce will be reduced once inpatient capacities have been downsized.
In general, the ambulatory sector appears to be much more regulated than the hospital sector. Explicit
coverage decisions regarding medical and surgical procedures are currently non-existent for the
hospital sector. This is due to the fact that coverage of medical devices and expensive medical
equipment falls under budget negotiations at hospital level and hospital plans at state level. 83
Hospital capacities will be reduced in Germany with a shift from inpatient to outpatient services. The
legal framework inhibits the restructuring in some ways: so far outpatient services are still mostly the
domain of doctors in private practice while hospitals are required to provide outpatient care. The
integration of services has received some support but there is still a long way to go. To a certain extent
further reductions in hospital length of stay are likely to be achieved. Hospitals will almost certainly
increase their outpatient services (e.g. same day surgery, diagnostic services). Some experts have
declared that the total number of hospitals will decline, while the share of private and more specialized
hospitals will increase. 84
80
Krankenhausstatistik (2001), www.dkgev.de
81
Koerner (2001), e-mail
82
Wieners (2001:143)
83
European Observatory on health care systems (2000:93)
84
Koerner (2001), e-mail
Future hospital care
34. Dutch Hospital Association 34
2. External analysis: trends influencing hospitals
More quality through greater cooperation
There is a need for greater collaboration within the health care system. The society's age-structure is in
the process of changing. The number of chronically ill patients and of elderly persons suffering from
several different illnesses at the same time is on the increase. new forms of care and treatment
provision have to be encouraged and supported. Physicians will have to work together more than has
been hitherto the case and improve their cooperation with other health professionals at the same time.
More time - better guidance
Caring will regain its position as one of the hallmarks of the public health care system. Patients need
doctors who have time to listen to them, to advise them and to inform them. Everything which
improves individual counselling and builds the relationship of trust between patients and doctors has to
be promoted. The reform strengthens the role of the family physician whose task it is to guide and
accompany patients through the sometimes less than transparent health care system.
Economize more - waste less
New technical equipment, new medicines, new treatment possibilities - medical progress is making
great strides but this progress also costs money. These costs can and need to be better controlled. The
available financial resources must be distributed and used in such a way that every patient can receive
the benefits and services he or she needs.
Better prevention - a better future
Promote health, prevent disease, treat the causes not the symptoms after the disease has taken hold -
that is modern health care policy. More support has to be given to health promotion, disease prevention
and rehabilitation. Self-help groups are being recognized, taken seriously and supported. The health
insurance funds are once more in a position to support and promote individual initiative in the
maintenance of health.
More rights - more individual responsibility
An increasing number of men and women have a critical attitude towards a health care system which
sees them merely as the object of care. Consequently, patients' rights and independent facilities for
patient counseling have to be strengthened. The entire health care system benefits from this new
situation since only well-informed and self-confident patients and insured persons are in a position to
take on responsibility for their health and are able to make sensible use of the benefits and services
offered by the health care system. 85
3. The future strategic position of hospitals among other healthcare providers
Improved cooperation
The cooperation of family practitioners, ambulatory specialists, and hospitals is being improved. In a
new act contracts are allowed between sickness funds and providers that cross the line between
ambulatory and the inpatient sectors. A group of providers could contract with funds to provide both
kinds of care. To promote a (voluntary) gatekeeping function of family practitioners, sickness funds are
allowed to give their insured a bonus if they access specialist via their family practitioner only. 86
85
Bundesministerium für Gesundheit (January 2001), Health care in Germany, including the health
care reform 2000, www.bmgesundheit.de
86
Wieners (2001:150)
Future hospital care