Renewing primary care: lessons learned from the Spanish health care system

Health Aff 29:1432-1441.

Department of Family Medicine at the Alpert Medical School, Brown University, in Providence, RI, USA

From 1978 on, Spain rapidly expanded and strengthened its primary health care system, offering a lesson in how to improve health outcomes in a cost-effective manner. The nation moved to a tax-based system of universal access for the entire population and, at the local level, instituted primary care teams coordinating prevention, health promotion, treatment, and community care. Gains included increases in life expectancy and reductions in infant mortality, with outcomes superior to those in the United States. In 2007 Spain spent $2,671 per person, or 8.5 percent of its gross domestic product on health care, versus 16 percent in the United States. Despite concerns familiar to Americans–about future shortages of primary care physicians and relatively low status and pay for these physicians–the principles underlying the Spanish reforms offer lessons for the United States.

PMID: 20679646

Mortality Prediction,Cost Burden Evaluation,Performance Assessment,United States,Cost-Benefit Analysis,Primary Health Care/economics,Spain,Universal Coverage/legislation & jurisprudence
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