The COVID-19 Pandemic and the Private Health Sector: Profiting without Socially Contributing.
Elias KondilisAlexios BenosPublished in: International journal of social determinants of health and health services (2023)
The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated the mobilization of all available health care resources, including private, for-profit ones. The aim of this multiple methods study (combination of document and secondary data analysis) was to assess government regulations facilitating the private health sector's participation in the COVID-19 response in Greece. During the pandemic, the government made three successive increases in private providers' reimbursement fees, provided additional financial incentives to private providers, and allocated €280 million of emergency funding for the private sector's involvement in the national COVID-19 response. In response, private hospitals made available on average 2.2% of their total bed capacity per epidemic wave for the treatment of COVID-19 patients and 1.7% of their total bed capacity for the treatment of non-COVID-19 patients transferred from National Health System (NHS) hospitals. In 2020 the five largest health care corporate groups maintained their revenues, while in 2021 they increased them by 18.7%-a striking comparison with the 9% recession experienced by the Greek economy in 2020 and its 8.4% recovery in 2021. In a time of an acute public health crisis, private health care providers responded to society's pressing health care needs by insulating their facilities from COVID-19 patients and NHS patient transfers, minimizing their social contribution and safeguarding their revenues and profits.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- sars cov
- public health
- coronavirus disease
- health insurance
- data analysis
- health information
- affordable care act
- emergency department
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- physical activity
- liver failure
- mental health
- hepatitis b virus
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- combination therapy
- human immunodeficiency virus
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- climate change
- aortic dissection
- drug induced
- hiv infected