Title of article :
The integration of two health systems: Social stratification, work and health in East and West Germany
Author/Authors :
Günther Lüschen، نويسنده , , Steffen Niemann، نويسنده , , Peter Apelt، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
17
From page :
883
To page :
899
Abstract :
This is an analysis of system integration, social stratification and work for health status and health care in East and West Germany. It is based on aggregate data and representative survey data of random samples of 2554 adults in both subsystems. Findings show that there were marked differences in life-expectancy prior to unification. The integration of the two systems, which occurred almost totally with regard to terms of West German health care organization, shows adjustment problems in the East for the public Health-Care-Funds and few if any for ambulatory care. The work situation has an impact on health, but there are no significant differences for East versus West. Social stratification variables show an influence on subjective health status for education (East) and for income, social status (West), while physician utilization (despite a preference of specialists by those with higher status) is not significantly determined by stratification variables in either East or West Germany. Beyond the central focus on work and stratification determinants a major finding pertains to a comparatively worse health situation for the aged and for women in what was the former East Germany. System models of Capitalism versus Socialism fit the results and recent history of the two systems to only a limited degree, as the West German corporate health system shows clear limits in following free market principles. The East German system, regardless of its centralized organization and move towards a socialist system, never fully abandoned the traditional model of German health care. Unlike the East German health system, that of West Germany, with its general expansion to 92% of the population, shows an increasing effect for social redistribution. The latter may be a reason why standard indicators of social stratification show less of an impact on health and health care than expected, while conditions at work clearly determine the health of people—the latter being the case in both the former East and West Germany.
Keywords :
work situation , East-West systems , health status , social stratification , health care
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Record number :
599306
Link To Document :
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