Chapter 5 Healthcare, including managed care Flashcards

-Explain components of a well-functioning healthcare. -Analyse the mechanics between the funding and supply of healthcare.

1
Q

What does Healthcare refer to? (3)

A

Healthcare refers to the

  • prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of…
  • …disease, illness, injury…
  • and other physical and mental impairments in humans.
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2
Q

What aspects/pillar do we find in a well-functioning healthcare system?

(4)

A
  • Robust financing mechanisms
  • A well-trained and adequately-paid workforce
  • Reliable information on which to base decisions and policies
  • Well-maintained health facilities and logistics to deliver quality technologies
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3
Q

Into what 3 main categories may the provision of care be classified? (3)

A
  • Primary care
  • Secondary care
  • Tertiary care
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4
Q

What is Primary Care?

Consider what primary care refers to (5)

The scope of primary care (4)

A

Primary care refers to

  • the work of all healthcare professionals who acts as a point of first contact for all patients in the healthcare system.
  • e.g: physiotherapist, general practitioner, non-physician primary care provider like nurse practitioner.
  • theses primary care healthcare professionals often
    • refer careseekers to secondary/tertiary care
    • possess a wide field of knowledge

Primary care involves widest scope of healthcare:

  • all ages of patients
  • patients of all socioeconomic and geographic origins
  • patients seeking to maintain optimal health
  • patients with all manner of acute and chronic physical, mental issues.
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5
Q

What is secondary care?

Consider the key features of secondary care (5)

Note on self referrals (2)

A

Secondary care refers to

  • the healthcare services provided by medical specialists that don’t have first point of contact/consultation with the patients…
  • …often to provide acute care necessary for a short time for a brief but serious injury
  • patients are usually referred to medical specialists by primary healthcare practitioners.
  • e.g. dermatologists, cardiologists and urologists, allied health professionals (usually, but not always)
  • is sometimes called ‘hospital care’

Self referrals

  • seconday care may involve self-referrals, although rarely.
  • secondary healthcare specialists like speech therapists, dietitians, occupational therapists are usually done by self-referrals
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6
Q

What is tertiary care? (3)

Give examples of tertiary care services (5)

A

Tertiary care refers to

  • specialist consultative healthcare
  • usually for in-patients referred by primary or secondary health professional
  • in a facility with personnel and facilities for advanced medical treatment and investigations, such as a tertiary hospital referral.
  • examples of tertiary care services are:
    • cancer management,
    • neurosurgery,
    • plastic surgery,
    • surgical investigations,
    • treatment of severe burns, etc.
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7
Q

What two key sectors may be responsible for the supply of healthcare?

(2)

A
  • Public sector healthcare supply
  • Private healthcare supply
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8
Q

What is public sector healthcare? (2)

Who can use public sector healthcare? (1)

What can often be associated with public sector healthcare? (1)

A

Public sector healthcare is that which is generally administered by the government/State

  • These healthcare services are heavily subsidized or provided for free

These healthcare services are used

  • by either foreigners or individuals without any medical aid

Often associated with

  • significant queues, prescribed protocol, limited alternatives/choices
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9
Q

What is private sector healthcare? (2)

Who can use private healthcare? (2)

A

Private sector healthcare is that which is administered by private institutions.

  • Consist of listed and unlisted companies.

Who can use?

  • Any member of the public can use these providers as long as they can fund the cost or are covered by a funding structure such as a medical aid scheme.
  • Where insurance used (within the private sector healthcare cover) does not pay the full cost of care provided, the patient is liable for difference.
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10
Q

Who are the supply-side key providers of healthcare services within a health system? (8)

A
  • Doctors
  • Nurses
  • Support medical personnel and clinical associates
  • Hospitals
  • Upstream service providers (ie other industries that supply healthcare goods/services)
    • pharmaceutical manfacturers
    • medicine distributers
    • suppliers of medical equipment
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11
Q

Supply-side key providers: doctors, support personnel and nurses

What balance needs to be struck between supply-side providers doctors, support personnel and nurses in a well functioning health system? (1)

In most countries, what often reduces a health system’s ability to supply health services? (3)

How does the private sector play a role in this? (4)

A

Regarding doctors, support personnel and nurses, there needs to be carefully planned balance of professional workers.

In most countries a lack of life-saving interventions/services is often caused by

  • poor mix of types and range of skills,
  • uneven grogrpahical distribution
  • critical shortages, especially in rural areas

Private sector influence

  • Private pays better so more likely to work there.
  • Health system may allow doctors to work part time in private sector to supplement income. However, this may not be allowed in all countries as can
    • undermine delivery in private sector and
    • misappropriate public sector resources
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12
Q

Supply-side key providers: hospitals

What contribution towards a country’s healthcare budget do hospitals make, and why? (3)

Comment on the potential broad onwership structure of hospitals within a healthcare system, and some characteristics specific to each ownwership structure (5)

A

Hospitals are usually the single largest component of a country’s (healthcare) expenditure, mostly because they are:

  • labour intensive + technology intensive…
  • …leading to costs rising faster than inflation

Hospitals mey either be

  • publically owned
    • many poorer countries spend more on primary care, so tertiary care has suffered due to budgetary constraints
  • privately owned
    • number of beds has been increasing, higher investment in staff, equipment, training and hotel services…
    • …leading to disparity between public and private sector.
    • private hospitals help alleviate pressure from public sector.
    • main users are: insured, wealthy, foreigners, beneficiaries of funds
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13
Q

Structure and ownership of private hospitals (2):

A
  • For-profit private hospitals
    • These hospitals are either privately owned or listed companies with a direct profit motive.
  • Not-for-profit private hospitals
    • Faith based hospitals
      • These hospitals and small hospitals played large role in providing hospitals to the rural poor; not very common
    • Mining hospitals
      • Geographically remote mining companies provide a range of healthcare services to their staff and sometimes families of staff.
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14
Q

Upstream service providers

Give examples of upstream service providers (3)

What important contribution do upstream service providers make towards the healthcare system? (1)

A

Service providers (ie other industries that supply healthcare goods/services)

  • pharmaceutical manfacturers (largest part of this group of suppliers)
  • medicine distributers
  • suppliers of medical equipment
  • food/beverages, water/elec

The provision of healthcare sector services is only possible because various other industries supply the necessary goods and services.

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15
Q

Funders of healthcare (6)

A
  1. the government
  2. non-government organisations and donors (may include foreign governments)
  3. employers
  4. commercial insurance products
  5. out-of-pocket expenditure by the users themselves
  6. trade-related employer groups
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16
Q

Funders: Government

How does goverment compare with other funders in terms of size? (1)

How might government funding be secured/provided? (7)

A
  • The largest funders of healthcare in a country
  • Usually funded by
    • taxes
    • reserves
    • grants
    • revenue funds
    • departmental receipts
    • can have specific funds e.g.
      • Road Accident Fund
      • Workmen’s Compensation Fund
  • In some instances gov may fund private healthcare
    • to alleviate the public sector demand
    • through tax or direct funding
17
Q

Funders: Non-government/donors

Give examples of non-government/donor funders of healthcare systems (1)

What kind of collaboration might occur between private and public sector in terms of non-goverment/donor funding sources for healthcare services? (2)

A

Healthcare funding from non-goverment/donor sources includes

  • foreign governments and organisation

In some cases, public and private sector may collaborate and private may fund public sector.

  • a example of this includes funding from the International Finance Corporation (IFC) being used to fund health and education in emerging markets
18
Q

Funders: Out-of-pockets expenditure

List the 3 forms of out-of-pocket expenditure used to fund healthcare provision (3)

A

There are 3 forms of out-of-pocket medical expenditure.

  • Payment of invoiced medical services by users of commercial health insurance products
  • Payments by those that don’t have commercial health insurance products
  • Payments for medical services not invoiced
19
Q

Funders: Out-of-pockets expenditure

Briefly expand on the following forms of out-of-pocket-expenditure used to fund the provision of healtchare services:

  • Payment of invoiced medical services by users of commercial health insurance products (3)
  • Payments by those that don’t have commercial health insurance products (3)
  • Payments for medical services not invoiced (2)
A

Payment of invoiced medical services by users of commercial health insurance products eg:

  • make co-payments
  • fund diff between actual and covered price of service
  • pay for services if threshold payments have been met.

Payments by those that don’t have commercial health insurance products eg:

  • young and healthy ppl who elected not to take any insurance
  • wealthy ppl who choose to self-insure
  • lower income individuals

Payments for medical services not invoiced eg:

  • surgeons and midwives.
20
Q

Funders: Trade-related employer groups

Describe how trade-related employer groups can be used to fund healthcare services and benefits (5)

A
  • Trade-related employer or groups often join to form bargaining councils.
  • Bargaining councils are established to manage schemes to benefit their parties or members.
  • These are generally low-income schemes with benefits to
    • primary healthcare, and
    • managed care options.
21
Q

Funders: Commercial insurance products (CIP)

In what way can these be used to fund healthcare benefits/services? (5)

A
  • There are various products in the insurance industry that contribute to healthcare costs.
  • Insurance policies designed to fund healthcare can be divided into four groups:
    • Optional alternative
    • Optional complement
    • Compulsory alternative
    • Compulsory complement
22
Q

Funders: commercial insurance products

What do we mean by the following groups of commercial insurance products, in terms of funding healthcare benefits?

  • optional alternative (3)
  • optional complement (4)
  • compulsory alternative (3)
  • compulsory complement (3)
A

Optional alternative

  • comprehensive State provision, with private insurance offering more quality/choice
  • opting to use commercial insurance products as an alternative to what the public sector already provides
  • hence, paying for commercial insurance products to cover expenses in private sector

Optional Complement

  • limited state provision, with private insurance providing balance
  • opting to use commercial insurance products to complement what the public sector already provides
  • eg for elective procedeurs soner than the state would provide
    • waiting policy or gap cover

Compulsory Alternative

  • comprehensive State provision for the poor, with private insurance purchase by those who State sees as not poor
  • using commercial insurance products where the health system has made it compulsory to fund alternative benefits to that given by the state
  • eg comprehensive cover for the wealthy whom the state considers can afford comprehensive cover

Compulsory Complement:

  • State providing some benefits for free (to all), with private insurance being used to cover the rest
  • using commercial insurance products for funding where the health system has made it compulsory (compelled) to obtain benefits not provided by the State to anyone at all
  • eg purchasing top-up plans, dental plans
23
Q

Funders : Employers

In what way can employers contribute to funding their employees’ health benefits? (6)

A

Employers contribute to financing employee health in various different ways

  • full or part payment of
    • commercial insurance prods e.g. med aid premiums
    • bargaining council premiums
  • payment for off- and on-site health services
  • payments to healthcare providers for acute medical treatment
  • payment towards social security funds eg UIF
  • wellness programmes
24
Q

Healthcare funding and supply mechanics: overview

What kind of ‘mechanics’/dynamic exists between the funding and supply of healthcare? (2)

What is the 3rd party payer problem? (5)

How might the issues within these funding/supply mechanics be mitigated? (3)

A
  • There are multiple funders in the healthcare ecosystem
  • Healthcare is subject to the “3rd party payer” problem ie a misalignment in motives between participants:
    • patient/user mostly isn’t paying for the service, resulting in healthcare users abusing “free” service
    • provider incentivised to provide more expensive/comprehensive treatment than actually required (to get paid more)
  • Ways to address these issues is by using
    • managed care
    • administrators who are profit organisations
    • underwriting principles to avoid and exclude risk
25
Q

For more information on managed care, see flashcards on ‘Managed Care’ (chapter 27)

A