Abstract :
Although choice may be seen as an end in itself, the papers
included in this special issue of Health Economics, Policy and Law, examine
choice policies in European systems of health care, which aim to be effective
instruments for ameliorating the systemic pressures from the iron triangle of
equity, efficiency, and cost. Three papers consider the nature of differences
between and within countries following the Beveridge and Bismarck models of
financing and organising the delivery of care, and how choices are changing
within different systems. Within countries following the Beveridge model, current
policies in England, Denmark and Sweden emphasise increasing patient choice of
provider. Within countries following the Bismarck model, current policies in
France and Germany seek to restrict choice of specialists by introducing ‘soft’
gatekeeping; and in the Netherlands there is a system of managed competition
with choice of insurer that, in principle, allows insurers to contract selectively