4.4 Article

Purchasing health services abroad: Practices of cross-border contracting and patient mobility in six European countries

Journal

HEALTH POLICY
Volume 95, Issue 2-3, Pages 103-112

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2009.11.016

Keywords

Cross-border contracting; Health services; Patient mobility; Competition; Performance; Waiting lists; EU

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Objectives: Contracting health services outside the public, statutory health system entails purchasing capacity from domestic non-public providers or from providers abroad. Over the last decade, these practices have made their way into European health systems, brought about by performance-oriented reforms and EU principles of free movement. The aim of the article is to explain the development, functioning, purposes and possible implications of cross-border contracting. Methods: Primary and secondary sources on purchasing from providers abroad have been collected in a systematic way and analysed in a structured frame. Results: We found practices in six European countries. The findings suggest that purchasers from benefit-in-kind systems contract capacity abroad when this responds to unmet demand; pressures domestic providers; and/or offers financial advantages, especially where statutory purchasers compete. Providers which receive patients tend to be located in countries where treatment costs are lower and/or where providers compete. The modalities of purchasing and delivering care abroad vary considerably depending on contracts being centralised or direct, the involvement of middlemen, funding and pricing mechanisms, cross-border pathways and volumes of patient flows. Conclusions: The arrangements and concepts which cross-border contracting relies on suggest that statutory health purchasers, under pressure to deliver value for money and striving for cost-efficiency, experiment with new ways of organising health services for their populations. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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