According to the report published by The Economist Intellligence Unit (attached below), in the three decades since the collapse of the Iron Curtain, the Czech Republic has made great strides in modernising its healthcare system. It has made the transition from the fully centralised, command economy system of the communist period to a system modelled more closely on those of its neighbours in the EU, which it joined in 2004.
Life expectancy has risen from just under 72 in 1989, at the fall of the Berlin Wall, to nearly 79 in 2015, still below the average life expectancy in the OECD and EU28, both of which stood at 81 years.1 The Czech Republic still provides virtually universal medical coverage, and access to modern treatment is comparably good, although funding problems remain.
Yet, the country’s healthcare system suffers from several challenges. The overall system of healthcare delivery needs modernisation, with an excess of investment in hospital care rather than in primary care, a looming shortage of general practitioners and an underdeveloped electronic healthcare (e-healthcare) infrastructure driving the need for structural changes. These factors, combined with a lack of sufficient political will for reforming the system, have hobbled policymakers in the past and will present a key test for the country’s government.
Many of the problems facing the Czech system are structural in nature. In particular, a lack of modernisation of the system, especially in the provision of mental healthcare services and the introduction of e-health tools, including e-health records, and the absence of legislation to underpin qualitative measurement of the care provided contributes to inefficiency in healthcare delivery.
From a political perspective, there is a lack of clear division of policy-setting roles relating to health insurance spending decisions. Although the statutory health insurance (SHI) is made up of seven independent health insurance funds, the Ministry of Health still dominates spending decisions affecting the insurance funds.
The transition to a fuller functioning, privately operated outpatient sector and the shifting of funding of the hospital sector from the state to health insurance funds has been particularly difficult, given that an effective set of rules governing this change was not put in place at the time of the transition in the 1990s, says Ladislav Švec, director of the Czech Health Insurance Bureau— this is a liaison body for public health insurance and healthcare, the board of which is made up of the general directors of the health insurance funds and representatives of the Ministry of Health and other relevant government agencies.
The transition from a system in which the state dominates the terms of service and payment for services to a system based on the insured’s claim against the insurer is a process that continues to evolve, he says. Establishing “a state of independent contractual relations between providers and payers is still the biggest challenge,” he adds.
“The Czech healthcare system is not suited to the challenges of modern healthcare,” adds Pavel Hrobon, a partner at the Advanced Healthcare Management Institute in Prague, which provides degree programmes in the area of healthcare management. “Provision of care is extremely fragmented, the system is not able to provide integrated care for patients with chronic diseases, our hospital structure is outdated in terms of process and there is a growing shortage of doctors and nurses.”
Experts have identified three main areas where policymakers need to focus: more comprehensive development of the infrastructure for health technology assessment (HTA); better provision of primary care and integration with other parts of the healthcare system; and more efficient use of financial resources.
Key findings:
Source: The Economist Intelligence Unit
Comments by Czech experts:
Pavel Hroboň, partner, Advanced Healthcare Management Institute, Prague, Czech Republic adds details to the topics on the EIU list:
- the need to reform the newtwork of hospitals under pressure of relative (not abolute) shortage of medical staff
- fragmentation of care among GPs, specialists and hospitals where poor communication (also due to the low degree of electronization) makes it difficult to provide effective care to chronically ill patients
- low attention devoted to prevention and health literacy of general population, i.e. behaviour leading to healthy life
- the lack of assessment of the quality of care
- need to rethink financing of the health care system in the light of ageing society
Pavla Skoupá, president, Czech Chapter of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, and professor, Medical Data Center, Charles University Prague, Czech Republic comments that she does not think people seek acute care stations in hospitals due to the low accessibility of primary care. The thinking behind is: It is easier for me to visit hospital than a GP who would send me to a specialist anyway. Priorities should be electronization connected with assessment of quality of care provided by each individual medical practitioner and each institution.Strengthening the primary care is a good idea, but we also should think about how the primary care medical staff will cope with the requirement to extend their expert erudition and what happens with the currently large group of specialists. A priority in the area of HTA is a better implementation thereof. The question is what to do with interventions that are not cost-effective. The process of assessment and decision-making should be separated.
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