| Literature DB >> 29776404 |
Thomas Rice1, Wilm Quentin2, Anders Anell3, Andrew J Barnes4, Pauline Rosenau5, Lynn Y Unruh6, Ewout van Ginneken7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Countries rely on out-of-pocket (OOP) spending to different degrees and employ varying techniques. The article examines trends in OOP spending in ten high-income countries since 2000, and analyzes their relationship to self-assessed barriers to accessing health care services. The countries are Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Coinsurance; Comparative health systems; Copayments; Cost-sharing; Deductibles; Out-of-pocket costs
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29776404 PMCID: PMC5960112 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3185-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Recent Previous Research on Out-of-Pocket Spending
| Study | Countries | Data/Variable | Key Findings | Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baird, 2016 [ | Australia, France, Israel, Japan, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, Switzerland, United States | Individual survey on OOP spending compared to income from Luxembourg Income Study (2010 for most countries) | • In median country, 13% of people spend more than 10% of income in OOP. | • Focuses on percentage of population with high OOP spending during a single year. |
| Palladino et al., 2016 [ | Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland | Survey of people age 50 and older from Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, with data on changes in OOP spending and experiencing catastrophic OOP spending (30% or more of income), from 2006/7 to 2013 (Great Recession) | • Very large range in changes in OOP spending (− 11% in Netherlands to + 101% in Austria). | • Focuses on changes in OOP spending during limited time period. |
| Tambor et al., 2011 [ | 27 countries in the European Union | Review of international data bases, laws and regulations, and reports on changes in patient cost sharing requirements since 1990 | • Cost-sharing requirements vary a great deal between countries, and have increased significantly in many. | • Focuses on health policies in countries, but little detail provided. |
| Zare & Anderson, 2013 [ | France, Germany, Japan, United Kingdom, United States (Medicare only) | Various data sets from OECD, WHO, European Observatory, and country-specific reports, time period 2000–2010; separately examine cost sharing for pharmaceuticals, inpatient, and ambulatory care | • Inflation-adjusted OOP spending, and spending divided by income, increased in all countries. | • Focuses on health policies in 5 countries. |
Fig. 1Three dimensions determine the level of out-of-pocket spending. Adapted from Busse and Schlette, 2007 [7]
Fig. 2OOP spending per capita (in PPP and constant prices) vs growth in OOP per capita (in PPP and constant prices), from 1994-2004 vs. 2004-2014. Note: The base of each line, represented by “x,” shows the average annual rate of increase in PPP-adjusted per capita in OOP spending during the 1994-2004 period. The end of each line, represented by the arrowhead, provides the same figure for the 2004-2014 period. Countries are combined into three groups. The blues lines represent countries with historically low OOP spending; the red, countries with historically high OOP spending; and the yellow, countries with mid-level historical OOP spending. Source: adapted from OECD Health Statistics, 2017 [12]
Differences in Growth in Out of Pocket Costs Between Country Groupings
| Predicted Mean Percent Change in OOP/Capita 1994–2004 vs. 2004–2014 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Group 1 - Historically low OOP costs with higher recent growth | 3.63 | reference group |
| Group 2 - Historically moderate OOP costs with lower recent growth | −3.00 | < 0.001 |
| Group 3 - Historically high OOP costs with low to no recent growth | −3.56 | < 0.001 |
Fig. 3Percent adults reporting any of three access problems due to costs. Source: Commonwealth Fund, 2016 [29]
Key Out-of-Pocket Payment Requirements in the most Recent Year, by Country. This annex contains a table presenting a full description of all out-of-pocket payment requirements in the ten high-income countries studied in this paper
| Depth | Scope | Breadth | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deductibles | Co-insurance and co-payments | Extra-billing and reference prices | Protection mechanisms | |||
| Australiaa | none | - specialist ambulatory care: 15% co-insurance | - physicians may bill above fee schedule | - prescriptions: reduced co-payment for low-income and children: AUD6.20 + cap at AUD372; others: cap at AUD1,476 after which low-income co-payment applies. | excluded services: adult dental care, OTC drugs | universal coverage, |
| Canada | - for prescriptions (depending on province) | - prescriptions (depending on province): co-payment or co-insurance | - not allowed | - prescriptions: provincial regulations determine OOP caps and exemptions | Excluded services (depending on province): prescriptions, vision, dental care, home care, rehabilitation, medical devices/aids | universal coverage, |
| Englandb | none | - prescriptions: co-payment GBP8.40 | - none | -exemptions: children, low income, certain diseases, + for prescriptions and eye tests also aged 60+ | Excluded services: | universal coverage |
| France | none | - physician visits: 30% co-insurance + €1 co-payment per visit and lab test/x-ray | - 20% of physicians bill above fee schedule | - children exempted from co-payments | none | universal coverage, |
| Germanyc | None | - prescriptions and medical aids: 10% co-insurance (min €5, max €10) per prescription | - Reference prices exist for crowns and dentures (covering about 50% of normal treatment), prescriptions, and medical aids. | Exemption: Children under age 18; | excluded services: OTC drugs, certain services of uncertain benefit or unfavourable cost-effectiveness. | universal coverage; 10% covered by substitutive VHI |
| Netherlands | - €385 for all services except primary care | - 20-25% co-insurance for non-contracted care (only for benefits in-kind insurance policies) | - prescriptions: OOP above reference price | deductible exemption: children < 18, maternal care, integrated care programs | excluded services: adult dental care, certain prescriptions (statins, ASS, benzos), physiotherapy | universal coverage |
| Norwayd | None | co-payments: | - extra billing of services/materials used that are excluded from statutory coverage (this is not included in cap 1 or 2) such as bandage, consumables | - children under age 16 exempted from co-payments, up to 18 years for dental care | excluded services: adult dental care (with some exceptions for a few predefined conditions), prescription drugs not covered by the “blue list”, services provided by non-contracted providers, services provided or devices/materials used that are excluded from statutory coverage (e.g. bandages, consumables) | universal coverage |
| Swedene | - prescriptions: 1100 SEK (for adults> 18) | co-payments (varying across the 21 county councils): | - dental care: OOP above reference prices | General exemptions: | excluded services: | universal coverage |
| Switzerland | all services: min. CHF300 – max CHF2500 | - Co-insurance 10% of all costs above deductible; | - medical aids: patients pay OOP above reference price | - Children (< 19 y): no deductible (or voluntary between CHF 100 and CHF 600);- Maximum for co-insurance: CHF700/year (Children: CHF350/year) | excluded services: adult dental care, OTC drugs, psychotherapy performed by independent psychologists, vision aids | Universal coverage |
| US | Employer plans | Employer plans: | - usually not allowed | Employer plans: | Usually excluded: dental care and vision care | 8.6% uninsured |
aAUD amounts refer to 2016 values; refs: https://www.humanservices.gov.au/customer/enablers/2016-medicare-safety-net-thresholds; http://www.pbs.gov.au/info/healthpro/explanatory-notes/front/fee; http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/files/publications/fund-report/2016/jan/1857_mossialos_intl_profiles_2015_v7.pdf
bValues refer to 2016
cOOP requirements refer to SHI system; requirements for substitute VHI differ
dValues refer to 2015, ref.: http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/files/publications/fund-report/2016/jan/1857_mossialos_intl_profiles_2015_v7.pdf
eValues refer to 2011
Changes in Out-of-Pocket Payment Requirements Over 10-Year Period, by Country. This annex contains a table with a full description of the changes in out-of-pocket requirements over a 10-year period in the ten high-income countries studied in this paper
| Depth | Scope | Breadth | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deductibles | Co-insurance and co-payments | Extra-billing and reference prices | Protection mechanisms | |||
| Australia | -no change | 2005: pharmaceutical co-payments increased to AUD28.60 | - annual changes related to decisions of physicians | - 2005: incentive payment to GPs who do not extra bill | - minimal changes | - no change |
| Canada | - no change | - provincial level changes for prescriptions | - no change | - provincial level changes for low-income and elderly caps/exemptions | - no federal level change but provincial level changes | - no change |
| England | - no change | prescriptions: | - no change | - regular increase of prescriptions cap | - no change | - no change |
| France | - no change | 2005: introduction of €1 co-payments for physician visits, lab tests, x-rays | - changes related to choices of physicians | 2005 and 2008: introduction of €50 caps on co-payments for each type of service | - minimal changes | - no change; continuous growth of complementary VHI coverage |
| Germany | - no change | 2013: €10 per physician visit discontinued | 2005: introduction of reference price system for crowns and dentures | - no change | - minimal changes | since 2007: mandatory insurance |
| Netherlands | 2008: €150 deductible introduced | since 2010: emergence of co-insurance for non-contracted providers | - no change | 2014: several compensations for chronically ill were abolished (e.g. partial compensation for the mandatory deductible), but municipalities may provide such compensations now. | Many exclusions and some inclusions, e.g.: | - no change |
| Norway | - no change | - small changes to co-payment amounts, slowly increasing | - no change | - annual revision of co-payment cap, slowly increasing | - minimal changes | - no change |
| Sweden | - no change | - small increases to co-payment amounts for outpatient specialist care without referral in several county councils | - no change | 2008: reduced co-insurance for dental care above high cost threshold | 2009: prescription drug coverage restricted to lowest cost generic | - no change |
| Switzerland | - 2005: max deductible is increased from CHF1500 to CHF2500 | 2011: hospital co-payment is increased from CHF10 to: CHF 15 / day; | -no change | - no change | 2011: vision aids excluded from coverage; | - no change |
| US | Employer plans: | Employer plans: | - no change | Employer plans: | - dental care and vision care excluded in increasing proportion of plans | - coverage among the adult population increased from 82.9% in 2013 to 89% in 2016 [ |