Abstract :
In the 1990s, countries experimented with two models of health
care reforms based on choice of provider and insurer. The governments of the
UK, Italy, Sweden and New Zealand introduced relatively quickly ‘internal
market’ models into their single-payer systems, to transform hierarchies into
markets by separating ‘purchasers’ from ‘providers’, and enabling ‘purchasers’
to contract selectively with competing public and private providers so that
‘money followed the patient’. This model has largely been abandoned where
it has been tried. England, however, has implemented a modified ‘internal
market’ model emphasising patient choice, which has so far had disappointing
results. In the Netherlands, it took nearly 20 years to implement successfully
the model in which enrollees choose among multiple insurers; but these
insurers have so far only realised in part their potential to contract selectively
with competing providers. The paper discusses the difficulties of implementing
these different models and what England and the Netherlands can learn from
each other. This includes exploration, as a thought experiment, of how choice
of purchaser might be introduced into the English National Health Service
based on lessons from the Netherlands.