Introduction In view of the strong increase in health expenditure, it is necessary to investigate whether proportional increases in healthcare production for the beneficiaries of the National Health Fund have corresponded to this increase. Methods In this observational, descriptive, and retrospective longitudinal research, we estimate the technical efficiency of the National Health Services System through the average cost of production and average labor productivity in the period from 2010 to 2019. Results During the studied decade, production has increased by approximately 6% annually; the number of workers increased (mostly physicians) by 61%; spending on salaries increased by 106% in real terms; spending on consumer goods and services has increased by 25% in real terms; the efficiency of spending has decreased by 21%, and productivity is the least dynamic element of the system with an average annual growth rate of 0.6%. After subtracting the diagnostic tests component, this scenario worsens. Conclusions The results show that higher health expenditure has not been matched by commensurate increases in output, translating into a fall in the efficiency of healthcare expenditure and meager increases or falls in productivity, depending on how the output is measured. This means that the public sector's growth strategy depends mainly on increases in the number of workers. This low productivity is a serious constraint to improving healthcare access for National Health Fund beneficiaries and contributes to increasing waiting lists. Special attention should be paid to average production costs and average labor productivity in a scenario of less dynamic growth in public health spending and health system reform.
Introduction In Chile, there is controversy regarding the magnitude of financing for the health system. Some experts state that more resources are needed, while others refer to the problems that may arise in managing a growing pool of resources. Aim This article aims to offer evidence to encourage critical discussion through a time series analysis of the leading financial aggregates in constant 2018 Chilean pesos of the Chilean social security in the period from 2000 to 2018. Methods We did an observational, descriptive, longitudinal, and time series trend analysis study. Financial aggregates are organized according to social security definitions and by financial administrators—the public National Health Fund and the private health insurers. Results Social security health spending has increased almost four-fold in the study period. After enacting the Explicit Guarantees in Health, the National Health Fund expanded more than the private health insurance system due to government allocations to the National Health Fund. In contrast, individual contributions decreased steadily every year during the study period. Per capita expenditure was higher in the private health insurance system. However, the per capita expenditure of the private insurance system over the public health fund has gradually decreased over time. Conclusion Firstly, Chile increased its health spending at a rate higher than observed in other Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development countries. Secondly, it transitioned from financing health mainly through workers’ contributions to growing prominence of the government’s overall contribution. In the wake of the announced health reform, the discussion of health funding will include employers’ role in health financing.
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