Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance
Pooling is the health system function whereby collected health revenues are transferred to purchasing organizations. Pooling ensures that the risk related to financing health interventions is borne by all the members of the pool and not by each con...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/09/5638380/risk-pooling-health-care-financing-implications-health-system-performance http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13651 |
id |
okr-10986-13651 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-136512021-04-23T14:03:09Z Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance Smith, Peter C. Witter, Sopie N. ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ADVERSE SELECTION BANK PUBLICATIONS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BURDEN OF DISEASE CAPITATION CAPITATION SYSTEM CLINICS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES COVERAGE CREAM SKIMMING DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DRAFTS ECONOMIC STATUS EMPLOYMENT EXCESSIVE CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES EXPOSURE EXTERNALITIES FEE FOR SERVICE FINANCIAL RISK FINANCIAL VIABILITY HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH CARE FINANCE HEALTH CARE FINANCING HEALTH CARE INSURANCE HEALTH CARE POLICY HEALTH CARE RESOURCES HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH CARE SPENDING HEALTH CARE UTILIZATION HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH CONDITIONS HEALTH ECONOMICS HEALTH EXPENDITURE HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH FINANCING HEALTH GAIN HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH RISK HEALTH RISKS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE HEALTH SYSTEMS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RESOURCES INCOME INDEBTEDNESS INDUCED DEMAND INFECTIOUS DISEASES INFORMATION SYSTEMS INSURANCE CONTRACTS INSURANCE FUNDS INSURANCE PREMIUMS INSURANCE SYSTEMS INSURERS INTEGRATION INTERVENTION LESSONS LEARNED LIABILITY LIFE CYCLE LOW INCOME LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MANAGED CARE MANAGED COMPETITION MEDICAID MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MEDICAL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS MEDICARE MORAL HAZARD NUTRITION OLDER PEOPLE PATIENTS PAYMENT SYSTEMS POOLS PREMIUMS PREPAYMENT PRIVATE INSURANCE PROGRAMS PROMOTING HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH INSURANCE PUBLIC SECTOR RATES RISK PROFILES RISK SHARING SAFETY SAVINGS SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL INSURANCE SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS PATIENTS Pooling is the health system function whereby collected health revenues are transferred to purchasing organizations. Pooling ensures that the risk related to financing health interventions is borne by all the members of the pool and not by each contributor individually. Its main purpose is to share the financial risk associated with health interventions for which there is uncertain need. The arguments in favor of risk pooling in health care embody equity and efficiency considerations. The equity arguments reflect the view that society does not consider it to be fair that individuals should assume all the risk associated with their health care expenditure needs. The efficiency arguments arise because pooling can lead to major improvements in population health, can increase productivity, and reduces uncertainty associated with health care expenditure. The report considers four classes of risk pooling: no risk pool, under which all expenditure liability lies with the individual; unitary risk pool, under which all expenditure liability is transferred to a single national pool; fragmented risk pools, under which a series of independent risk pools (such as local governments or employer-based pools) are used; and integrated risk pools, under which fragmented risk pools are compensated for the variations in risk to which they are exposed. It notes that small, fragmented risk pools, which are the norm in developing countries, contribute to seriously adverse outcomes for health system performance. 2013-05-29T19:57:44Z 2013-05-29T19:57:44Z 2004-09 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/09/5638380/risk-pooling-health-care-financing-implications-health-system-performance http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13651 English en_US Health, Nutrition and Population (HNP) discussion paper; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ADVERSE SELECTION BANK PUBLICATIONS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BURDEN OF DISEASE CAPITATION CAPITATION SYSTEM CLINICS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES COVERAGE CREAM SKIMMING DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DRAFTS ECONOMIC STATUS EMPLOYMENT EXCESSIVE CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES EXPOSURE EXTERNALITIES FEE FOR SERVICE FINANCIAL RISK FINANCIAL VIABILITY HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH CARE FINANCE HEALTH CARE FINANCING HEALTH CARE INSURANCE HEALTH CARE POLICY HEALTH CARE RESOURCES HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH CARE SPENDING HEALTH CARE UTILIZATION HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH CONDITIONS HEALTH ECONOMICS HEALTH EXPENDITURE HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH FINANCING HEALTH GAIN HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH RISK HEALTH RISKS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE HEALTH SYSTEMS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RESOURCES INCOME INDEBTEDNESS INDUCED DEMAND INFECTIOUS DISEASES INFORMATION SYSTEMS INSURANCE CONTRACTS INSURANCE FUNDS INSURANCE PREMIUMS INSURANCE SYSTEMS INSURERS INTEGRATION INTERVENTION LESSONS LEARNED LIABILITY LIFE CYCLE LOW INCOME LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MANAGED CARE MANAGED COMPETITION MEDICAID MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MEDICAL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS MEDICARE MORAL HAZARD NUTRITION OLDER PEOPLE PATIENTS PAYMENT SYSTEMS POOLS PREMIUMS PREPAYMENT PRIVATE INSURANCE PROGRAMS PROMOTING HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH INSURANCE PUBLIC SECTOR RATES RISK PROFILES RISK SHARING SAFETY SAVINGS SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL INSURANCE SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS PATIENTS |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ADVERSE SELECTION BANK PUBLICATIONS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BURDEN OF DISEASE CAPITATION CAPITATION SYSTEM CLINICS COMMUNICABLE DISEASES COVERAGE CREAM SKIMMING DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DRAFTS ECONOMIC STATUS EMPLOYMENT EXCESSIVE CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES EXPOSURE EXTERNALITIES FEE FOR SERVICE FINANCIAL RISK FINANCIAL VIABILITY HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH CARE FINANCE HEALTH CARE FINANCING HEALTH CARE INSURANCE HEALTH CARE POLICY HEALTH CARE RESOURCES HEALTH CARE SERVICES HEALTH CARE SPENDING HEALTH CARE UTILIZATION HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH CONDITIONS HEALTH ECONOMICS HEALTH EXPENDITURE HEALTH FACILITIES HEALTH FINANCING HEALTH GAIN HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH RISK HEALTH RISKS HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE HEALTH SYSTEMS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RESOURCES INCOME INDEBTEDNESS INDUCED DEMAND INFECTIOUS DISEASES INFORMATION SYSTEMS INSURANCE CONTRACTS INSURANCE FUNDS INSURANCE PREMIUMS INSURANCE SYSTEMS INSURERS INTEGRATION INTERVENTION LESSONS LEARNED LIABILITY LIFE CYCLE LOW INCOME LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MANAGED CARE MANAGED COMPETITION MEDICAID MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MEDICAL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS MEDICARE MORAL HAZARD NUTRITION OLDER PEOPLE PATIENTS PAYMENT SYSTEMS POOLS PREMIUMS PREPAYMENT PRIVATE INSURANCE PROGRAMS PROMOTING HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH INSURANCE PUBLIC SECTOR RATES RISK PROFILES RISK SHARING SAFETY SAVINGS SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL INSURANCE SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA TUBERCULOSIS TUBERCULOSIS PATIENTS Smith, Peter C. Witter, Sopie N. Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance |
relation |
Health, Nutrition and Population (HNP)
discussion paper; |
description |
Pooling is the health system function
whereby collected health revenues are transferred to
purchasing organizations. Pooling ensures that the risk
related to financing health interventions is borne by all
the members of the pool and not by each contributor
individually. Its main purpose is to share the financial
risk associated with health interventions for which there is
uncertain need. The arguments in favor of risk pooling in
health care embody equity and efficiency considerations. The
equity arguments reflect the view that society does not
consider it to be fair that individuals should assume all
the risk associated with their health care expenditure
needs. The efficiency arguments arise because pooling can
lead to major improvements in population health, can
increase productivity, and reduces uncertainty associated
with health care expenditure. The report considers four
classes of risk pooling: no risk pool, under which all
expenditure liability lies with the individual; unitary risk
pool, under which all expenditure liability is transferred
to a single national pool; fragmented risk pools, under
which a series of independent risk pools (such as local
governments or employer-based pools) are used; and
integrated risk pools, under which fragmented risk pools are
compensated for the variations in risk to which they are
exposed. It notes that small, fragmented risk pools, which
are the norm in developing countries, contribute to
seriously adverse outcomes for health system performance. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
Smith, Peter C. Witter, Sopie N. |
author_facet |
Smith, Peter C. Witter, Sopie N. |
author_sort |
Smith, Peter C. |
title |
Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance |
title_short |
Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance |
title_full |
Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance |
title_fullStr |
Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance |
title_full_unstemmed |
Risk Pooling in Health Care Financing : The Implications for Health System Performance |
title_sort |
risk pooling in health care financing : the implications for health system performance |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/09/5638380/risk-pooling-health-care-financing-implications-health-system-performance http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13651 |
_version_ |
1764424159912263680 |