Private health insurance in Japan, Republic of Korea and Taiwan, China

Soonman Kwon*, Naoki Ikegami, Yue Chune Lee

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: Chapter同行評審

2 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

Japan, the Republic of Korea and Taiwan, China are neighbouring high-income countries with some similarities in health systems policy. All three have historically organized publicly financed health coverage around the labour market, with the government paying for some or all of the costs of self-employed, retired or poorer people, but Japan has a much higher share of public spending on health and a much lower share of out-of-pocket payments than the other two. All three rely heavily on the private sector to deliver health services. And in all three, private health insurance plays a supplementary role, offering subscribers daily cash benefits in case of hospitalization or lump sum payments in case of severe illness such as cancer. Although private health insurance markets in these countries are marginal in terms of spending on health, they cover relatively large shares of the population.

原文English
主出版物標題Private Health Insurance
主出版物子標題History, Politics and Performance
發行者Cambridge University Press
頁面304-324
頁數21
ISBN(電子)9781139026468
ISBN(列印)9780521125826
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 1 10月 2020

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