The Irish health system and the crisis: a case study in the struggle for the capacity of the Social State

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Journal ArticleDate:
2018Access:
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Thomas, S., Barry, S., Johnston, B. & Burke, S., The Irish health system and the crisis: a case study in the struggle for the capacity of the Social State, Annals of the Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 17, 1, 2018, 27 - 36Download Item:
Abstract:
Ireland’s health care system is a weak Beveridgean system with no
entitlement to free care and substantial acute waiting lists. Just under
half the population has voluntary private health insurance and there
is a two-tier access to acute care with dual practice consultants.
Ireland experienced a multifaceted and severe economic crisis from
2008. From late 2010 until late 2013, the government was forced
into a Troika bailout of €85 billion. The health sector was given a
fairly free hand in the initial Memorandum of Understanding although
there was substantial dialogue between the Irish government and
the Troika on overspending, competition, the safety net system and
high pharmaceutical costs. Yet, in reality, Ireland imposed its own
austerity package cutting on health resources and shifting costs onto
families and private households. This caused a negative impact on the
financial protection of households, acute hospital waiting lists and
the health status of the population, albeit alongside some efficiencies.
Nevertheless, there is hope for a better health care system with the
cross-party development of the Sláintecare Plan to bring Universal
Health care over a ten year period through expanded entitlements
and system overhaul. Despite opposition from vested interests this is
slowly being implemented.
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Annals of the Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine;17;
1;
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Austerity, Efficiency, Cost-shifting, Universal healthcare, Health policy, IrelandMetadata
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