Abstract

In health care systems based upon managed competition, insurers are expected to negotiate with providers about price and quality of care. The Dutch experience, however, shows that quality plays a limited role in insurer-provider negotiations. It has been suggested that this is partly due to a lack of cooperation among insurers. This raises the question whether cooperation amongst insurers is a precondition or a substitute for quality-based competition. To answer this question, we mapped insurers' cooperating activities to enhance quality of care using a six-stage continuum. The first three stages (defining, designing and measuring quality indicators) may enhance competition, whereas the next three stages (setting benchmarks, steering patients and selective contracting) may reduce it. We investigated which types of insurer cooperation currently take place in the Netherlands. Additionally, we organized focus groups among insurers, providers and other stakeholders to examine their perceptions on insurer cooperation. We find that all stakeholders see advantages of cooperation amongst insurers in the first stages of the continuum and sometimes cooperate in this domain. Cooperation in the next stages is almost absent and more controversial because without adequate quality information, it is difficult to assess whether the benefits outweigh the cost associated with reduced competition.

Highlights

  • In countries with a health care system based upon managed competition (e.g. Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands), insurers are expected to act as prudent buyers of care on behalf of their enrolees

  • Studying the role of health insurers in the Netherlands could contribute to a deeper understanding of how the model of managed competition works in practice

  • Several studies find that quality plays a limited role in insurer–provider negotiations and consumer choices in the Dutch health care system [ Nederlandse Zorgautoriteit (NZa), 2014; Ruwaard et al, 2014; van Kleef et al, 2014; Maarse et al, 2016; OECD/European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, 2017; Holst et al, 2019; Stolper et al, 2019]

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Summary

Introduction

In countries with a health care system based upon managed competition (e.g. Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands), insurers are expected to act as prudent buyers of care on behalf of their enrolees. Consumers can choose between competing insurers which are expected to contract high-quality health care at the lowest price possible in order to maintain or increase their market shares. Central to the reform is the notion that private health insurers, competing within public constraints, act as prudent buyers of health care on behalf of their enrolees (Enthoven and van de Ven, 2007). In this system, the government determines a standardized benefit package that insurers are obliged to offer. The four largest health insurance companies have a combined market share of 86.5% [Nederlandse Zorgautoriteit (NZa), 2018]

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