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Balancing Costs, Choice, Quality and Coverage - Lessons for the United States?

The Belgian Health Care System

Health Care, Global Economics, Europe


Event Summary

Belgium and the United States face similar challenges in dealing with health care costs. Their elderly populations will more or less double over the next 25 years, aggregate health care expenditures will continue to rise, and health care costs will most likely grow at a faster rate than general inflation. Government budgets will struggle to meet their legislative mandates to finance quality health care for their respective constituents.

 

Event Information

When

Monday, February 05, 2007
12:00 PM to 2:00 PM

Where

Stein Room
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Kathleen Elliot Yinug

E-mail: kyinug@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6162

Devoting only half as much of its GDP to health as the United States does, Belgium has created a flexible, public-private partnership to pay for and deliver health care that preserves many of the attributes that Americans desire: universal coverage; comprehensive coverage of physician services, hospital care, and prescription drugs; free choice of primary physicians and specialists; and acceptable waiting periods for non-emergency services.

On February 5, 2007, Brookings hosted a presentation on these issues by the architect of Belgium's recent health care policy, Minister for Social Affairs and Public Health, Rudy Demotte. Minister Demotte discussed the measures that Belgium uses to contain costs and reduce budget deficits in the health sector, while preserving quality care. Brookings Senior Fellow Henry Aaron and Kaiser Family Foundation Executive Vice President Diane Rowland reflected what lessons can be learned from the Belgian experience.

 

Transcript

MR. DEMONTTE: Ladies and gentleman, I am really delighted to be here with you today. Health policy as you know it is one of the most important fields of policy. There is no policy field where a citizen's well-being is so directly involved. In a recent article on health care published in USA Today, my attention was attracted to the following comment I cite: "One of the basic questions about health care is an old one. Should health care be a right for everyone regardless of income, preexisting illness, or bad genes? Or should it be a privilege obtained by hard work or bestowed by good birth? We would never agree that police and fire protection should be distributed on income, so why should health care?" The quote indicates very clearly that debate on health policy issues is and must be essentially based on values, and the question is, do we need values?

One could ask do we really need values, and what kind of values. My answer would be positive for the following reason, we need values. Modern science constantly brings people to new results. The exploding progress in research and technology offers significant benefits and health gains. At the same time, these revolutions raise important problems, improvement in health has no limits, but resources do have limits. This means that policymakers are always confronted with the need to make choices. I think we can best justify our choices when we demonstrate through our decisions that we respect and implement the values supported by the citing. Let me tell you about what I feel as of European values.

Participants

Introduction

Rudy Demontte

Minister for Social Affairs and Public Health, Federal Government of Belgium

Panelists

Diane Rowland

Executive Vice President, Kaiser Family Foundation

Henry J. Aaron

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies


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