Titulo | The painful effects of the financial crisis on Spanish health care. |
Autoría | Bosch X, Moreno P, López-Soto A. |
Fuente | Int J Health Serv. 2014;44(1):25-51. |
Resumen |
Spain has an advanced, integrated health care system that has achieved remarkable results, including substantially improved health outcomes, over a relatively short time. Measures introduced by central and regional governments to combat the financial crisis may be severely affecting the health sector, with proposed changes potentially threatening the principles of equity and social cohesion underlying the welfare state. This article examines recent developments in Spanish health care, focusing on the austerity measures introduced since 2010. In Spain, as in other countries, evaluation of health care changes is difficult due to the paucity of data and because the effects of measures often lag well behind their introduction, meaning the full effects of changes on access to care or health outcomes only become apparent years later. However, some effects are already clear. With exceptions, Spain has not used the crisis as an opportunity to increase efficiency and quality, rationalize and reorganize health services, increase productivity, and regain public trust. We argue that immediate health care cuts may not be the best long-term answer and suggest evidence-driven interventions that involve the portfolio of free services and the private sector, while ensuring that the most vulnerable are protected. |
URL | www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24684083 |
Tipo de documento | Artículo cientifico |
Impacto en el sistema sanitario | Medidas de eficiencia/reducción costes |
Impacto en la salud | -- |