Department of Family Medicine at the Alpert Medical School, Brown University, in Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2010 Aug;29(8):1432-41. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0023.
From 1978 on, Spain rapidly expanded and strengthened its primary health care system, offering a lesson in how to improve health outcomes in a cost-effective manner. The nation moved to a tax-based system of universal access for the entire population and, at the local level, instituted primary care teams coordinating prevention, health promotion, treatment, and community care. Gains included increases in life expectancy and reductions in infant mortality, with outcomes superior to those in the United States. In 2007 Spain spent $2,671 per person, or 8.5 percent of its gross domestic product on health care, versus 16 percent in the United States. Despite concerns familiar to Americans--about future shortages of primary care physicians and relatively low status and pay for these physicians--the principles underlying the Spanish reforms offer lessons for the United States.
从 1978 年开始,西班牙迅速扩大并加强了其初级卫生保健系统,为如何以具有成本效益的方式改善健康结果提供了一个经验教训。该国转向了全民税收为基础的全民获得医疗保健制度,在地方一级,设立了初级保健团队,协调预防、促进健康、治疗和社区护理。取得的成果包括预期寿命的增加和婴儿死亡率的降低,其结果优于美国。2007 年,西班牙人均支出 2671 美元用于医疗保健,占国内生产总值的 8.5%,而美国则为 16%。尽管美国人对未来初级保健医生短缺以及这些医生相对较低的地位和薪酬感到担忧,但西班牙改革所依据的原则为美国提供了一些经验教训。