lpetrich
Contributor
Vox explores health care systems around the world in Everybody Covered - Vox - "What the US can learn from other countries’ health systems."
How Taiwan built “Medicare for all” and gave everyone health insurance - Vox
A lot of people didn't like it at first, and many people doubted that it would succeed, but it did. Some 25 years after it was established, its approval rating is 80%.
"Taiwanese patients use a lot of health care, and it puts a strain on providers"
"Sustaining a single-payer system requires hard choices for patients, providers, and taxpayers"
... Vox reporters traveled the world last fall to see other health systems in action, talking with doctors, patients, and government officials to get the full and often complex picture. Everybody Covered takes a closer look at a single-payer plan in Taiwan, a private-public hybrid in Australia, supercharged Obamacare in the Netherlands, the vaunted National Health Service of Great Britain, and an innovative hospital budgeting scheme right here in Maryland. Our project was made possible by a grant from The Commonwealth Fund.
How Taiwan built “Medicare for all” and gave everyone health insurance - Vox
It was inspired by Canada's single-payer system and the UK's National Health Service.In the 1990s, Taiwan did what has long been considered impossible in the US: The island of 24 million people took a fractured and inequitable health care system and transformed it into something as close to Sen. Bernie Sanders’s vision of Medicare-for-all as anything in the world.
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There’s clearly a need for lessons. Compared to the rest of the developed world, America spends more money on health care and produces worse outcomes. By one advanced metric — mortality for causes that should be avoidable with accessible, high-quality health care — the United States ranked last among the G7 countries in 2016. America’s infant mortality rate is almost double that of some of its peers. Nearly one in 10 Americans lack insurance. People go bankrupt over medical bills. Yet Americans still spend about twice as much money on health care per capita as the average comparable country.
No health care system is perfect. But most of America’s economic peers have figured out a way to deliver truly universal coverage and quality care. The United States has not.
A lot of people didn't like it at first, and many people doubted that it would succeed, but it did. Some 25 years after it was established, its approval rating is 80%.
Benefits are generous, and though it does have copays, they are small, about $12.Part of its appeal is its simplicity. Everybody in Taiwan is insured through the National Health Insurance Administration (NHIA). They receive an ID card as proof of coverage, which also stores their medical records. The Taiwanese program runs with extraordinary efficiency: About 1 percent of its funding is spent on administration, according to a 2015 review by Cheng. (Compare that to the US, where researchers have estimated that private insurers spend around 12 percent of overhead, and hospitals spend around 25 percent on administrative work.) Experts say Taiwan’s advanced IT infrastructure deserves a good share of the credit.
"Taiwanese patients use a lot of health care, and it puts a strain on providers"
Chien says he sometimes sees the same patient dozens of times every year in the emergency department where he works, often for problems that aren’t emergencies. The low costs mean patients have little incentive to avoid the ER.
“Everyone wants to live forever, but it’s impossible,” Chien says. “Some people abuse emergency, abuse health care.”
At the same time, because Taipei has a lot of traffic accidents, injured drivers and pedestrians come through his emergency department’s doors all the time. His attention is divided when it shouldn’t be.
"Sustaining a single-payer system requires hard choices for patients, providers, and taxpayers"
I think that that is a serious issue - how much should we try to keep alive people who are very sick, when it may be a lot of effort with very little gained.National health insurance achieved what the Taiwanese government hoped it would. Everybody can afford health care. People are living longer, healthier lives. But the ever-growing cost of providing health care to everybody makes it challenging for the program to remain financially sustainable.
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But it helps that national health insurance has proven so popular. People want to make it work because single-payer has clearly improved Taiwanese lives.
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It may take more than that. Shou-Hsia Cheng, the NTU professor, predicted Taiwan would soon have to reevaluate its payments for end-of-life care. The country is currently debating how to expand long-term care for an aging population; it’s not covered by the national health plan.