1. Health policy developments in the Western Balkan Countries 2000–19: towards European Health and Health Care Policies.
- Author
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Qosaj, Fatime Arenliu and Bourdeaux, Margaret
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,CLINICAL medicine ,HEALTH status indicators ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH promotion ,CUSTOMER satisfaction ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia have committed to becoming European Union (EU) member states. This, among others, implies that candidate/potential candidate states adopt legally authorized EU policies, including health. The study aims to identify the main country-specific health policy areas critical to the EU accession health policy dimension and present the change in associated selected health indicators from 2000 to 2019. Methods The study draws on published reports and analyses of official statistics over time and cross-country. Health care policy adherence to the European Commission's recommended country-specific health actions was classified into five health policy areas: financing, payment, organization, regulation and persuasion. Key health policy areas for Western Balkan countries (WBCs) were identified. Health progress or lack thereof in catching up to the EU15 population health, health expenditure and the number of health professionals are measured. Results The European Commission prioritized financing and regulation for all WBCs in the five policy areas. Nine of the 18 analyzed selected health indicators showed divergence, and the other nine converged towards the EU15 averages. WBCs continue to face diverse public health challenges in improving life expectancy at birth, death rates caused by circulatory system diseases, malignant neoplasms, traffic accidents, psychoactive substance use, tuberculosis incidence, tobacco smoking prevalence and public-sector health expenditure. Conclusions By 2019, there is limited evidence of WBCs catching up to the average EU15 health levels and health care policies. Closer attention towards EU health and health care policies would be favourable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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