Cargando…

Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany

BACKGROUND: Health insurance coverage for all citizens is often considered a requisite for reducing disparities in health care accessibility. In Germany, health insurees are covered either by statutory health insurance (SHI) or private health insurance (PHI). Due to a 20%–35% higher reimbursement of...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lungen, Markus, Stollenwerk, Bjoern, Messner, Philipp, Lauterbach, Karl W, Gerber, Andreas
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2246139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18184426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-9276-7-1
_version_ 1782150725254512640
author Lungen, Markus
Stollenwerk, Bjoern
Messner, Philipp
Lauterbach, Karl W
Gerber, Andreas
author_facet Lungen, Markus
Stollenwerk, Bjoern
Messner, Philipp
Lauterbach, Karl W
Gerber, Andreas
author_sort Lungen, Markus
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Health insurance coverage for all citizens is often considered a requisite for reducing disparities in health care accessibility. In Germany, health insurees are covered either by statutory health insurance (SHI) or private health insurance (PHI). Due to a 20%–35% higher reimbursement of physicians for patients with PHI, it is often claimed that patients with SHI are faced with longer waiting times when it comes to obtaining outpatient appointments. There is little empirical evidence regarding outpatient waiting times for patients with different health insurance status in Germany. METHODS: We called 189 specialist practices in the region of Cologne, Leverkusen, and Bonn. Practices were selected from publicly available telephone directories (Yellow Pages 2006/2007) for the specified region. Data were collected for all practices within each of five specialist fields. We requested an appointment for one of five different elective treatments (allergy test plus pulmonary function test, pupil dilation, gastroscopy, hearing test, MRT of the knee) by calling selected practices. The caller was randomly assigned the status of private or statutory health insuree. The total period of data collection amounted to 4.5 weeks in April and May 2006. RESULTS: Between 41.7% and 100% of the practices called were included according to specialist field. We excluded practices that did not offer the requested treatment, were closed for more than one week, did not answer the call, did not offer fixed appointments ("open consultation hour") or did not accept any newly registered patients. Waiting time difference between private and statutory policyholders was 17.6 working days (SHI 26.0; PHI 8.4) for allergy test plus pulmonary function test; 17.0 (25.2; 8.2) for pupil dilation; 24.8 (36.7; 11.9) for gastroscopy; 4.6 (6.8; 2.2) for hearing test and 9.5 (14.1; 4.6) for the MRT of the knee. In relative terms, the difference in working days amounted to 3.08 (95%-KI: 1,88 bis 5,04) and proved significant. CONCLUSION: Even with comprehensive health insurance coverage for almost 100% of the population, Germany shows clear differences in access to care, with SHI patients waiting 3.08 times longer for an appointment than PHI patients. Wide-spread anecdotal reports of shorter waiting times for PHI patients were empirically supported. Discrepancies in access to care not only depend on accessibility to comprehensive health insurance cover, but also on the level of reimbursement for the physician. Higher reimbursements for the provider when it comes to comparable health problems and diagnostic treatments could lead to improved access to care. We conclude that incentives for adjusting access to care according to the necessity of treatment should be implemented.
format Text
id pubmed-2246139
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-22461392008-02-19 Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany Lungen, Markus Stollenwerk, Bjoern Messner, Philipp Lauterbach, Karl W Gerber, Andreas Int J Equity Health Research BACKGROUND: Health insurance coverage for all citizens is often considered a requisite for reducing disparities in health care accessibility. In Germany, health insurees are covered either by statutory health insurance (SHI) or private health insurance (PHI). Due to a 20%–35% higher reimbursement of physicians for patients with PHI, it is often claimed that patients with SHI are faced with longer waiting times when it comes to obtaining outpatient appointments. There is little empirical evidence regarding outpatient waiting times for patients with different health insurance status in Germany. METHODS: We called 189 specialist practices in the region of Cologne, Leverkusen, and Bonn. Practices were selected from publicly available telephone directories (Yellow Pages 2006/2007) for the specified region. Data were collected for all practices within each of five specialist fields. We requested an appointment for one of five different elective treatments (allergy test plus pulmonary function test, pupil dilation, gastroscopy, hearing test, MRT of the knee) by calling selected practices. The caller was randomly assigned the status of private or statutory health insuree. The total period of data collection amounted to 4.5 weeks in April and May 2006. RESULTS: Between 41.7% and 100% of the practices called were included according to specialist field. We excluded practices that did not offer the requested treatment, were closed for more than one week, did not answer the call, did not offer fixed appointments ("open consultation hour") or did not accept any newly registered patients. Waiting time difference between private and statutory policyholders was 17.6 working days (SHI 26.0; PHI 8.4) for allergy test plus pulmonary function test; 17.0 (25.2; 8.2) for pupil dilation; 24.8 (36.7; 11.9) for gastroscopy; 4.6 (6.8; 2.2) for hearing test and 9.5 (14.1; 4.6) for the MRT of the knee. In relative terms, the difference in working days amounted to 3.08 (95%-KI: 1,88 bis 5,04) and proved significant. CONCLUSION: Even with comprehensive health insurance coverage for almost 100% of the population, Germany shows clear differences in access to care, with SHI patients waiting 3.08 times longer for an appointment than PHI patients. Wide-spread anecdotal reports of shorter waiting times for PHI patients were empirically supported. Discrepancies in access to care not only depend on accessibility to comprehensive health insurance cover, but also on the level of reimbursement for the physician. Higher reimbursements for the provider when it comes to comparable health problems and diagnostic treatments could lead to improved access to care. We conclude that incentives for adjusting access to care according to the necessity of treatment should be implemented. BioMed Central 2008-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2246139/ /pubmed/18184426 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-9276-7-1 Text en Copyright © 2008 Lungen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Lungen, Markus
Stollenwerk, Bjoern
Messner, Philipp
Lauterbach, Karl W
Gerber, Andreas
Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany
title Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany
title_full Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany
title_fullStr Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany
title_full_unstemmed Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany
title_short Waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: A randomized empirical study in Germany
title_sort waiting times for elective treatments according to insurance status: a randomized empirical study in germany
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2246139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18184426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-9276-7-1
work_keys_str_mv AT lungenmarkus waitingtimesforelectivetreatmentsaccordingtoinsurancestatusarandomizedempiricalstudyingermany
AT stollenwerkbjoern waitingtimesforelectivetreatmentsaccordingtoinsurancestatusarandomizedempiricalstudyingermany
AT messnerphilipp waitingtimesforelectivetreatmentsaccordingtoinsurancestatusarandomizedempiricalstudyingermany
AT lauterbachkarlw waitingtimesforelectivetreatmentsaccordingtoinsurancestatusarandomizedempiricalstudyingermany
AT gerberandreas waitingtimesforelectivetreatmentsaccordingtoinsurancestatusarandomizedempiricalstudyingermany