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The importance of health systems has been reinforced by the commitment of Low- and Middle-Income Countries (L&MICs) to pursue the targets of Universal Health Coverage, Health Security, and to achieve Health-related Sustainable Development Goals. The COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed the fragility of health systems in countries of all income groups. Authored by international experts across five continents, this book demonstrates how health systems can be strengthened in L&MICs by unravelling their complexities and by offering a comprehensive overview of fundamental concepts, performance assessment approaches and improvement strategies to address health system challenges in L&MICs. Centred on evidence and advocacy this unique resource on health systems in L&MICs will benefit a wide range of audiences including, readers engaged in public health practice, educational programs and research initiatives; faculties of public health and population sciences; policymakers, managers and health professionals working for governments, civil society organizations and development agencies in health.
The chapter examines the main economic developments in the Israeli healthcare system and focuses on the contribution of the National Health Insurance Law (1995) to changing the configuration of incentives between the health funds and their members, between the health funds and the government, and between the health funds and the hospitals. An analysis is presented of the main trends in national health expenditure in Israel and its financing and the main reasons for its relative stability, in contrast to the upward trend that characterizes most of the OECD countries. The chapter also looks at the changes that have occurred in the private health insurance market (supplementary health insurance and commercial health insurance) and the effect of these changes on the system’s equality and efficiency. It will also discuss the trends in the main inputs into the healthcare system (manpower and hospital beds) relative to the system’s outputs (life expectancy and infant mortality).
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