353800.pdf

Today, health insurance is a key component in the system of social security in most European Union countries. In many of these countries, modern health-insurance funds and healthcare insurers play an essential role in implementing the public health-insurance system. Many of these health-insurance fu...

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Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Aksant Academic Publishers 2010
Διαθέσιμο Online:http://www.aksant.nl/boeken/boek_820.asp
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-348322022-04-26T12:22:46Z Two Centuries of Solidarity Companje, K.P. Hendriks, R.H.M. Veraghtert, K.F.E. Widdershoven, B.E.M. geschiedenis history geography auxiliary disciplines Belgium Germany Health care Health insurance Insurance Netherlands bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History Today, health insurance is a key component in the system of social security in most European Union countries. In many of these countries, modern health-insurance funds and healthcare insurers play an essential role in implementing the public health-insurance system. Many of these health-insurance funds have a long and fascinating history, of which clear traces can be seen today in the organisation and structure of health insurance, as well as health-insurance funds and insurers. In Two centuries of solidarity, the authors compare the systems of health insurance, health-insurance funds and healthcare insurers in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. Given the similar political, economic and social development that these countries have undergone in the past 60 years and the availability of a qualitatively high level of health care, one might expect a high degree of similarity between these countries' healthcare insurance systems. However, the dissimilarities are surprising. In fact, these differences are currently becoming ever more apparent between systems in general, and the structure and operation of the health insurance funds and health care insurers in particular. The differences include the compulsory nature of insurance, the extent of coverage, premiums, entrepreneurship, competition, and the degree of private insurance. Many of these national singularities can be understood and explained only by considering the historical background of the health insurance systems, the insurers, and their evolution over the past two centuries. This study adopts an institutional and political perspective towards a further understanding of the development of health insurance, and of how this ultimately determined the specific nature of the healthcare insurers and funds and the way they currently operate in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. 2010-12-31 23:55:55 2019-04-30 13:24:37 2020-04-01T15:27:40Z 2020-04-01T15:27:40Z 2009 book 353800 OCN: 751962298 9789052603445 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/34832 eng History of Healthcare Insurance application/pdf n/a 353800.pdf http://www.aksant.nl/boeken/boek_820.asp Aksant Academic Publishers 10.26530/OAPEN_353800 10.26530/OAPEN_353800 e594620f-6d70-4b21-b5e7-a9574474c0ab 9789052603445 3 400 open access
institution OAPEN
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description Today, health insurance is a key component in the system of social security in most European Union countries. In many of these countries, modern health-insurance funds and healthcare insurers play an essential role in implementing the public health-insurance system. Many of these health-insurance funds have a long and fascinating history, of which clear traces can be seen today in the organisation and structure of health insurance, as well as health-insurance funds and insurers. In Two centuries of solidarity, the authors compare the systems of health insurance, health-insurance funds and healthcare insurers in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. Given the similar political, economic and social development that these countries have undergone in the past 60 years and the availability of a qualitatively high level of health care, one might expect a high degree of similarity between these countries' healthcare insurance systems. However, the dissimilarities are surprising. In fact, these differences are currently becoming ever more apparent between systems in general, and the structure and operation of the health insurance funds and health care insurers in particular. The differences include the compulsory nature of insurance, the extent of coverage, premiums, entrepreneurship, competition, and the degree of private insurance. Many of these national singularities can be understood and explained only by considering the historical background of the health insurance systems, the insurers, and their evolution over the past two centuries. This study adopts an institutional and political perspective towards a further understanding of the development of health insurance, and of how this ultimately determined the specific nature of the healthcare insurers and funds and the way they currently operate in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands.
title 353800.pdf
spellingShingle 353800.pdf
title_short 353800.pdf
title_full 353800.pdf
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title_full_unstemmed 353800.pdf
title_sort 353800.pdf
publisher Aksant Academic Publishers
publishDate 2010
url http://www.aksant.nl/boeken/boek_820.asp
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