TY - JOUR
T1 - International report
T2 - Current state and development of health insurance and emergency medicine in Germany. The influence of health insurance laws on the practice of emergency medicine in a European country
AU - Platz, Elke
AU - Bey, Tareg
AU - Walter, Frank G.
PY - 2003/8
Y1 - 2003/8
N2 - Germany has a comprehensive health insurance system, with only 0.183% of the population being uninsured. Access to office-based medicine and to hospitals is easy and convenient. Due to enormous financial pressures, Germany is currently decreasing the number of beds in hospitals, introducing the Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG), and restricting accessibility to specialists. In contrast to Anglo-American countries, Germany follows the concept of bringing the physician to the patient in the prehospital setting, with Emergency Medical Services (EMS) physicians responding to all Advanced Life Support (ALS) calls. Despite a mature EMS system with sophisticated medical equipment and technology, both in the prehospital and hospital setting, logistical issues such as a single emergency telephone number or multidisciplinary Emergency Departments have yet to be established. Within the hospital, this "Franco-German model" considers Emergency Medicine a practice model that does not merit specialty status. Spending restrictions in the health care system, with less access to hospital beds and office-based physicians, will increase the demand for hospital-based emergency care when patients experience problems accessing the medical system. Currently, the German hospital system is unprepared to care for greater numbers of emergency patients. This may call for changes in the German health care system as well as the medical education system, with the introduction of hospital-based Emergency Medicine as its own specialty, similar to Anglo-American countries.
AB - Germany has a comprehensive health insurance system, with only 0.183% of the population being uninsured. Access to office-based medicine and to hospitals is easy and convenient. Due to enormous financial pressures, Germany is currently decreasing the number of beds in hospitals, introducing the Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG), and restricting accessibility to specialists. In contrast to Anglo-American countries, Germany follows the concept of bringing the physician to the patient in the prehospital setting, with Emergency Medical Services (EMS) physicians responding to all Advanced Life Support (ALS) calls. Despite a mature EMS system with sophisticated medical equipment and technology, both in the prehospital and hospital setting, logistical issues such as a single emergency telephone number or multidisciplinary Emergency Departments have yet to be established. Within the hospital, this "Franco-German model" considers Emergency Medicine a practice model that does not merit specialty status. Spending restrictions in the health care system, with less access to hospital beds and office-based physicians, will increase the demand for hospital-based emergency care when patients experience problems accessing the medical system. Currently, the German hospital system is unprepared to care for greater numbers of emergency patients. This may call for changes in the German health care system as well as the medical education system, with the introduction of hospital-based Emergency Medicine as its own specialty, similar to Anglo-American countries.
KW - Germany
KW - Health care finances
KW - Health insurance laws
KW - International Emergency Medicine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0041666392&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1016/S0736-4679(03)00173-2
DO - 10.1016/S0736-4679(03)00173-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 12902012
AN - SCOPUS:0041666392
SN - 0736-4679
VL - 25
SP - 203
EP - 210
JO - Journal of Emergency Medicine
JF - Journal of Emergency Medicine
IS - 2
ER -