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Portrait of Anders Anell. Photo.

Anders Anell

Professor

Portrait of Anders Anell. Photo.

Choice and privatisation in Swedish primary care.

Author

  • Anders Anell

Summary, in English

In 2007, a new wave of local reforms involving choice for the population and privatisation of providers was initiated in Swedish primary care. Important objectives behind reforms were to strengthen the role of primary care and to improve performance in terms of access and responsiveness. The purpose of this article was to compare the characteristics of the new models and to discuss changes in financial incentives for providers and challenges regarding governance from the part of county councils. A majority of the models being introduced across the 21 county councils can best be described as innovative combinations between a comprehensive responsibility for providers and significant degrees of freedom regarding choice for the population. Key financial characteristics of fixed payment and comprehensive financial responsibility for providers may create financial incentives to under-provide care. Informed choices by the population, in combination with reasonably low barriers for providers to enter the primary care market, should theoretically counterbalance such incentives. To facilitate such competition is indeed a challenge, not only because of difficulties in implementing informed choices but also because the new models favour large and/or horizontally integrated providers. To prevent monopolistic behaviour, county councils may have to accept more competition as well as more governance over clinical practice than initially intended.

Department/s

  • Institute of Economic Research
  • Department of Business Administration

Publishing year

2011

Language

English

Pages

549-569

Publication/Series

Health Economics, Policy and Law

Volume

6

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Topic

  • Economics and Business
  • Business Administration

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1744-134X