Quantitative Techniques in
Health Care Financing
25 May to 3 July
Workload:
40 hours per week
Faculty: Dr. Raymond
Wagener, Hiroshi Yamabana
Assessments:
Presentations, assignments,
written exam
Content and objectives
The objective of the course
is to study quantitative
tools used in order to
analyze health care systems
are financed. In general,
this means that the complex
reality of national health
systems and health care
delivery systems has to be
represented by quantitative
models allowing to describe
how the financing of the
health system works and to
analyze the mechanisms
explaining the tendencies
observed. Building on such
an understanding of the
system, models may be
constructed to forecast the
future financial development
of the system and the future
consequences of the reforms
undertaken today.
Thus the objectives of the
course will be to:
- Study the object of
the modelling effort, the
health system in its
financial
- Effort through an
introduction to the health
economics;
- Present the quantitative
aspects by discussing
statistical indicators
- Above all the construction
of health accounts;
- Discuss health policy
questions and what
quantitative information
- Work is needed to
reach well informed
decisions on these
questions;
- Construct health care
finance models
- Understand the use and
limitations of the model
Nearly
all policy decisions
regarding national health
systems must be based on the
quantitative aspects of the
options available, and the
impact of any decisions
taken. The latter is also a
critical input to reform.
Hence, the ability to
quantitatively describe
health systems as well as to
create a range of
hypothetical, plausible
scenarios, based on new
directions for those
systems, is increasingly
important throughout the
world. The methods presented
in this course allow
students to construct a
clear and complete
description of how a health
care system is financed. It
furthermore illustrates how
demographic, economic and
social factors affect the
financial ability of the
system in the short and
medium term. In addition,
students will be trained to
forecast the impact of
current decisions on health
expenditures in the future.
Literature
·
Cichon,
M., Newbrander, W., Yamabana,
H., Weber, A., Normand, C.,
Dror, D. & Preker, A.
(1999). Modelling in
health care finance a
compendium of quantitative
techniques for health care
financing. Geneva:
International Labour Office
·
International Labour Office
(2002). The ILO
Population Projection Model
– A Technical Guide.
Geneva: International Labour
Office
-
Normand, C. & Weber, A.
(1994). Social health
insurance - A Guidebook
for planning.
Geneva: World Health
Organization &
International Labour
Organization