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View Full Version : Should the U.S Health System "Go Dutch"?


Fish
09-17-07, 07:49 AM
http://medinnovationblog.blogspot.com/2007/09/should-us-health-system-go-dutch.html

Summary

On Jan. 1, 2006, after 4 years in the making, the Netherlands, a nation with a population of 16.6 million, implemented a new health system requiring all individuals to buy or pay health premiums, private insurers to offer coverage regardless of pre-existing illness, premiums to be adjusted for risk, consumers to be made aware of costs, and not requiring employers to offer coverage. Since the plan’s inception, health inflation has ebbed from 4.5% to 3.0%, compared to a drop in the U.S. from 8.0% to 6.1% over the same period.

Will America “Go Dutch”? Not soon, in my opinion, because of the U.S.’s diversity, our regional differences, our partisanship, our size (land mass and population), our distrust of private health plans, and our preference for consumer and physician market competition. But the Dutch plan shows European governments can be innovative and aren’t averse to private competition.

bradclark1
09-17-07, 07:58 AM
private insurers to offer coverage regardless of pre-existing illness, premiums to be adjusted for risk
Thats sounds like a way to nudge those with pre-existing illness's out of any health care unless you are well off. Or am I missing something?

Onkel Neal
09-17-07, 06:38 PM
http://medinnovationblog.blogspot.com/2007/09/should-us-health-system-go-dutch.html

Summary

On Jan. 1, 2006, after 4 years in the making, the Netherlands, a nation with a population of 16.6 million, implemented a new health system requiring all individuals to buy or pay health premiums, private insurers to offer coverage regardless of pre-existing illness, premiums to be adjusted for risk, consumers to be made aware of costs, and not requiring employers to offer coverage. Since the plan’s inception, health inflation has ebbed from 4.5% to 3.0%, compared to a drop in the U.S. from 8.0% to 6.1% over the same period.

Will America “Go Dutch”? Not soon, in my opinion, because of the U.S.’s diversity, our regional differences, our partisanship, our size (land mass and population), our distrust of private health plans, and our preference for consumer and physician market competition. But the Dutch plan shows European governments can be innovative and aren’t averse to private competition.

Very interesting. :yep: