Study
| EST. READ TIME 2 MIN.Health Care Lessons from Germany
The German health care system has been recognized as one that provides good quality care with attentive service in which wait times are not considered to be a problem, as well as a system that rapidly adopts new medical innovations. A careful examination of the German health care system may provide insights and information to inform the Canadian debate over the future of Medicare.
Health care expenditures in Germany are considerably lower than in Canada. In 2009, Germany?s health expenditures, as an age-adjusted share of GDP, were 22% lower than Canada?s, and 1% lower than in the average nation with universal access to medical care. On health care inputs, the Canadian system has higher ratios of nurses to population, MRI machines to population, and CT scanners to population than the German health care system. On the other hand, Germany has higher ratios of physicians to population and hospital beds to population. Germans experience shorter wait times for emergency care, primary care, specialist care, and elect¬ive surgery than Canadians.
Looking at factors such as the health care systems? ability to success¬fully manage and treat chronic and critical illnesses, and provide protection from medically avoidable mortality, it seems that the German health care system broadly performs at a level similar to that in Canada, with a stronger performance in measures of patient safety.
The German health care system provides universal coverage through two insurance premium-funded systems: a Social Health Insurance sys¬tem for all Germans and a Private Health Insurance system that is an option for high-income and self-employed Germans. Though important in terms of funding, regulation, and oversight, governments play little role in the direct delivery of health care.
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Nadeem Esmail
Senior Fellow, Fraser Institute
Nadeem Esmail is a Senior Fellow of the Fraser Institute. He first joined the Fraser Institute in 2001, served asDirector of Health System Performance Studies from 2006 to 2009, and has been a Senior Fellow since 2010. Mr. Esmail has spearheaded critical Fraser Institute research including the annual Waiting Your Turn survey of surgical wait times across Canada and How Good Is Canadian Health Care?, an international comparison of health care systems. In addition, Mr. Esmail has authored or co-authored more than 30 comprehensive studies and more than 150 articles on a wide range of topics including the cost of public health care insurance, international comparisons of health care systems, hospital performance, medical technology, and physician shortages. A frequent commentator on radio and TV, Mr. Esmail's articles have appeared in newspapers across North America. Mr. Esmail completed his B.A. (Honours) in Economics at the University of Calgary and received an M.A. in Economics from the University of British Columbia.… Read more Read Less…
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