HealthManagement, Volume 4 / Issue 2 / 2009

Author

Elena Cantu,

is with Bocconi University,

Milan, Italy


From 1978, the Italian healthcare system has been organised according to the National Health Service model (Italian National Health Service, or INHS). Coverage is universal and, theoretically, uniform throughout the country. In 2003, public healthcare expenditure accounted for 75.1% of total healthcare expenditure.

 

The Italian healthcare system is tax-funded and most care is provided free of charge at the point of service.

 

Care is provided by government entities - Local Health Units or LHUs and Independent NHS Hospitals as well as private hospitals and professionals that are eligible for reimbursement when “accredited” by the relevant Region. The INHS has three tiers: the central government at the top; 21 regional governments in between; and 180 LHUs and 95 IHs at the bottom.

 

INHS staff (about 660,000 people, 1.1% of the Italian population) are under national contracts; wages and salaries are based on position and age. General practitioners (about 55,000) are not INHS employees, but provide primary care and refer patients to higher levels of care.

 

From 1978 to 1992, the INHS was characterised by centralised funding based on past expenditures.

 

In the 1990s, the INHS underwent major reform introducing managerialism, decentralisation to regions and quasi-markets.

 

Under managerialism, many hospitals were taken out of LHU control and established as independent entities (IHs); general managers replaced highly politicised boards of trustees; LHUs and IHs were given greater decision-making autonomy, but were also required to meet higher performance standards.

 

Under decentralisation, regional governments achieved greater control over LHUs and IHs, appointed their general managers, provided them with guidelines, and were expected to cover the deficits.

 

Under this new arrangement, each region became a parent company with LHUs and IHs as its subsidiaries. So

much so, that some claim Italy no longer has one National Health Service but rather 21 regional ones.

 

At present, a further decentralisation process is under discussion, giving more power to regions on health and requiring that funding be collected at regional level, with an interregional/equalisation fund to guarantee national equity on per capita funding.

 

Quasi-market mechanisms were expected to induce better performance by requiring money to “follow patients”. As a general rule, each LHU will reimburse other LHUs, IHs and accredited private providers for care given to its residents. Reimbursements are DRG based for hospital discharges and fee-for-service for outpatient services.

 

Under this general framework, each region is free to design its own funding arrangements. Italy’s regions have consequently been experimenting with different organisational and funding models to achieve an acceptable combination of equity, efficiency, freedom of choice and cost containment.

 

The Italian Hospital System

Hospitals have always played a central role in the INHS. Table 1 shows the different types of hospitals operating in Italy in terms of number, ownership and size.

 

In the last few years, health policy has pursued a shift from hospital to ambulatory care, resulting in a sharp decrease in the number of public hospitals (from 1,068 in 1995 to 732 in 2003) and public acute beds (from about 300,000 in 1995 to 200,000 in 2003). In contrast, accredited hospitals have remained stable (about 530 hospitals and 50,000 beds), probably because they focused on rehabilitation, long-stay and chronic disease care traditionally.

 

The current density of NHS beds is 4.8 for 1000 inhabitants (4.2 beds for acute care and 0.6 for non-acute care).

 

Internal organisation

The head of each public healthcare organisation (LHUs and IHs) is a General Manager (GM) appointed by the region. He is accountable for his performance and could be dismissed, if deemed inadequate.

 

The replacement of highly politicised Boards of Trustees with a GM was one of the most significant INHS reforms in the 1990s, marking a sharp departure from the traditional bureaucratic paradigm.

 

This spoil system showed some strengths but also weaknesses. In particular, regions were replacing their GMs too frequently. Nationwide, the average GM tenure was 3.2 years between 1996 and 2003. This seemed too short a period for effective management, especially in view of the complexity of healthcare organisations; the marked discontinuities brought about by GM turnover in the absence of strong managerial systems and market discipline; and the destabilising effects of turnover expectations.

 

Traditionally, the organisational structure of public hospitals was fragmented into numerous small, independent departments (e.g. general medicine, nephrology, gastroenterology). Numerous publications had recommended that thesedepartments merge into larger “divisions”or “clinical directorates” to reach an effectivecompromise between specialisationand integration, and create a team ofclinical managers interfacing the professionalswith the GM.

 

Managerialism reforms encouraged public providers to follow this recommendation. According to a survey in 2003, clinical directorates had been introduced by 92% of public providers and extended to all in-patient medical and surgical units by 77%. Despite the introduction of clinical directorates, the most important level of responsibility centres still corresponded to the traditional, fragmented departments.

 

Financing

As mentioned, the reforms of the 1990s significantly changed the funding system for public and accredited providers, from the traditional model based on past expenditures to a model where LHUs were financed on an adjusted capitation basis and money followed patients when they chose to receive care not from their own LHU of residence but from IHs, accredited private providers or other LHUs.

 

The purpose is to place healthcare organisations under further pressure to improve efficiency and quality of care and reduce waiting lists. The undesirable effect may lead to an excessive increase in the volume of services provided to LHU residents by other LHUs, IHs and private providers, where “excessive” means “unnecessary”.

 

Consequently, all the regions try to limit this potential distortion by means of:

Ó differentiated fee schedules (according to the private or public nature of healthcare organisations and to their organisational complexity and case-mix);

Ó lump sum funding for activities where DRG based or fee for service funding is deemed unfeasible or inappropriate (e. g. Funding emergency departments);

Ó expenditure ceilings and targets defined by the region for each single provider or negotiation of bilateral contracts between LHUs and providers; and

Ó introduction of utilisation reviews to deny payment for services that do not meet specified appropriateness criteria and development of appropriateness guidelines especially for out-patient services.

 

[A notable exception to the above model is the Lombardy region, which had formally opted for a radical purchaserprovider split: all hospitals were taken out of LHU control, grouped where necessary and established as IHs. As a consequence, LHUs do not provide in-patient care and out-patient specialist care. This model implies a more extensive use of activity-based funding.]

 

A Long Running Story

The question of introducing a specific, healthcare management-oriented culture in hospitals has been the subject of a decades-long debate. An impetus was provided by the availability of IT systems and tools to enhance the efficiency of decision making by hospital administrators. The latest such systems take the form of management information system (MIS) ‘dashboards’ - the topic of a previous Healthcare IT Management feature by an Australian expert.

 

More recently, there has been a change in thinking about the very definition and role of a management-oriented culture, as far as enhancing healthcare quality is concerned. Several studies in the US and Britain have followed in-depth investigation into the subject earlier this decade, respectively at the Institute of Medicine in Washington and the British Government’s NHS Quality Strategy.

 

In general, there is an emerging consensus that IT and sophisticated data management techniques do not automatically translate into a better healthcare culture. Instead, broader and deeper systemic change, and even ‘cultural transformation’ is required. Critics, however, insist that there is no such thing as a healthcare organisational ‘culture’, and even were one to be conjured up, it need not have any bearing on healthcare performance and quality. Indeed, some warn that hasty efforts at change could end up doing more harm than good.

 

Healthcare IT Management believes that one interesting exercise may be to map and benchmark healthcare against the management cultures of other economic sectors (which have been studied more extensively). In spite of the distinctiveness of healthcare, there are some areas – for example, public education – where experiences (both positive and negative) may have some major commonalities.

 

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