Which Country Has the Best Health Care by former National
Institutes of Health executive, Ezekiel Emmanuel, attempted to rank global
health care, albeit he and his team only reviewed eleven nations.
Choice of Clinician
Americans assume that private sector healthcare plans provide a greater choice of clinician and facility, but Emmanuel shows this isn’t the case. France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and Taiwan all have greater choice than the United States and they are all versions of socialized medicine. Switzerland, which is somewhat similar to the U.S. with its requirement to purchase private insurance as the funding mechanism for healthcare, offers greater provider choice than the U.S. because of its government regulations. This table shows how these top scoring nations regulate patient choice in comparison to the U.S.
Nation |
Choice
of Physicians |
Waiting
Times |
France |
Individual choice, physician private practices dominate, MD's make house calls |
No wait times, Availability of care depends on location |
Germany |
No gatekeepers, patients have free choice |
Abundance of hospitals- no wait times |
Netherlands |
Driven by primary care providers, GP must provide
specialist referral |
Only 15% exceeded targeted wait times in 2014 |
Norway |
Individuals choose provider and can switch twice each year |
Significant queues and travel to specialty centers |
Taiwan |
Any clinician or hospital, patient chooses |
Minimal queues for services |
United States |
Patient choice is restricted by insurance companies; surprise
bills are common for non-network services |
Minimal waits, but availability of care depends on location |
The U.S. spends vastly more per person on health care than
any other nation and individuals pay a significant portion of their health care
expenses. This table shows the healthcare
burden per person (including children) and the proportionality based on median
household income. Median represents the income that is truest to a representative
average when outliers for highest (Elon Musk) and lowest incomes (incomes of $1,000
for example) are removed. Using the same data set for 2017 from the
Commonwealth Fund.org report in 2020, I drew the per-person-out-of-pocket
expenses for these countries.
Nation |
Cost of Healthcare per person (2017 data)[2] |
Out of
pocket expenses per person cap (2017)[3] |
Median
Income per person (US$)[4] |
France |
$ 4,600 |
$ 463 |
$16,372 |
Germany |
$ 6,200 |
$ 731 |
$16,845 |
Netherlands |
$ 5,000 |
$ 572 |
$17,154 |
Norway |
$ 7,400 |
$ 860 |
$22,684 |
Taiwan |
$ 1,500 |
Not Available |
$13,605 |
United States |
$10,700 |
$1,122 |
$19,300 |
U.S. Insurance Cost to Employees
This table shows the potential pass-through costs to
employees with families for employer medical plans in 2017 and 2020. There are
many families who must choose between covering a spouse and children because
they cannot afford to pay for the insurance for both.
Premiums |
2017 |
2020 |
Employee |
$ 6690 |
$ 7,470 |
Employee and Family |
$18,764 |
$21,342 |
Pass through cost to Employee |
$12,074 |
$13,870 |
The United States uses more prescription drugs per person
than any other nation and also pays more for their medicines. This table shows international
drug pricing policies drawn from Ezekiel Emanuel’s 2020 analysis.
Nation |
Policy |
Drug
Prices |
France |
Type of drug determines who can prescribe it; gatekeeper
approach; some preapproval for exceptional drugs |
All drugs deemed irreplaceable are paid 100% |
Germany |
Physicians can’t prescribe off-label drug use, except for
special circumstances; no cost effectiveness requirement but RX prices are
reviewed every 12 months and prices are determined after analysis of similar
drugs; clinician prescribing policies are scrutinized |
Everyone pays the same price for a drug; RX markups are
limited for pharma |
Netherlands |
Preferred formularies are used to control prices; new
drugs must be authorized by the Medicines Evaluation Board which accounts for
efficacy of the drug and whether or not there is an equivalent already available;
hospitals and pharmacists play a role in RX price control |
Most drugs are free for patients |
Norway |
Ministry of Health and Care Services authorizes drugs for
a 5-year period, prices are subject to approval after a health technology
assessment; drugs are evaluated on quality-of-life impacts and scientific
value; centralized procurement for hospital drugs |
Blue list drugs have $58 copay for 3-month supply, subject
to $275 out of pocket max/yr |
Taiwan |
Drugs are purchased through clinics and hospitals; Federal
Drug Administration approves drugs but the National Health Insurance
Administration does secondary review for prices and reimbursement policy;
Drug costs are 50% of other industrialized countries |
Co-pays between $7 and $32 depending on the drug |
United States |
No price controls- whatever the market will bear; government
is prohibited from negotiating with drug companies; private sector restricts
formularies to control costs |
Copayments depend on the insurance plan; seniors bear
significant RX costs |
Roberta Winter is an independent journalist who accepts no money from any sector of the healthcare industry. Opinions expressed here are her own. This column has been in continuous publication since 2007. In 2013, Rowman and Littlefield published her guidebook to the US healthcare system. https://www.amazon.com/Unraveling-U-S-Health-Care-Personal/dp/1442222972
References
Emmanuel, E. J. (2020). Which Country Has the
World's Best Health Care? In E. J. Emmanuel, Which Country Has the
World's Best Health Care? Hachette Book Group. Retrieved November 2021
Kaiser Family Foundation. (2017, September 9). Employer
Health Benefits Survey-2017. Retrieved December 2, 2021, from Kaiser
Family Foundation.org:
https://www.kff.org/report-section/ehbs-2017-summary-of-findings/
Kaiser Family Foundation. (2020, October 8). 2020
Employer Health Benefits Survey. Retrieved December 2, 2021, from Kaiser
Family Foundation.org:
https://www.kff.org/report-section/ehbs-2020-summary-of-findings/
The Commonwealth Fund.org. (2017). Out-of-Pocket
Health Care Spending Per Capita. commonwealthfund.org. Retrieved
December 1, 2021, from
https://www.commonwealthfund.org/out-pocket-health-care-spending-capita
World Population Review. (n.d.). Median Income
By Country 2021. Retrieved December 1, 2021, from World Population
Review.com: https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/median-income-by-country
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