*http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,491382,00.html


**The French Lesson in Health Care

By Kerry Capell*

The nation's system isn't quite as superb as Sicko maintains, but it's
pretty good.

Michael Moore's documentarySicko trumpets France as one of the most
effective providers of universal health care. His conclusions and
fist-in-your-gut approach may drive some Americans up the wall. But whatever
you think of Moore, the French system -- a complex mix of private and public
financing -- offers valuable lessons for would-be health-care reformers in
the US.

In Sicko, Moore lumps France in with the socialized systems of Britain,
Canada, and Cuba. In fact, the French system is similar enough to the US
model that reforms based on France's experience might work in America. The
French can choose their doctors and see any specialist they want. Doctors in
France, many of whom are self-employed, are free to prescribe any care they
deem medically necessary. "The French approach suggests it is possible to
solve the problem of financing universal coverage...[without] reorganizing
the entire system," says Victor G. Rodwin, professor of health policy and
management at New York University.

France also demonstrates that you can deliver stellar results with this mix
of public and private financing. In a recent World Health Organization
health-care ranking, France came in first, while the US scored 37th,
slightly better than Cuba and one notch above Slovenia. France's infant
death rate is 3.9 per 1,000 live births, compared with 7 in the US, and
average life expectancy is 79.4 years, two years more than in the US. The
country has far more hospital beds and doctors per capita than America, and
far lower rates of death from diabetes and heart disease. The difference in
deaths from respiratory disease, an often preventable form of mortality, is
particularly striking: 31.2 per 100,000 people in France, vs. 61.5 per
100,000 in the US.

That's not to say the French have solved all health-care riddles. Like every
other nation, France is wrestling with runaway health-care inflation. That
has led to some hefty tax hikes, and France is now considering US-style
health-maintenance organization tactics to rein in costs. Still, some 65
percent of French citizens express satisfaction with their system, compared
with 40 percent of US residents. And France spends just 10.7 percent of its
gross domestic product on health care, while the US lays out 16 percent,
more than any other nation.

To grasp how the French system works, think about Medicare for the elderly
in the US, then expand that to encompass the entire population. French
medicine is based on a widely held value that the healthy should pay for
care of the sick. Everyone has access to the same basic coverage through
national insurance funds, to which every employer and employee contributes.
The government picks up the tab for the unemployed who cannot gain coverage
through a family member.

SAFETY NET

But the french system is much more generous to its entire population than
the US is to its seniors. Unlike with Medicare, there are no deductibles,
just modest co- payments that are dismissed for the chronically ill.
Additionally, almost all French buy supplemental insurance, similar to
Medigap, which reduces their out-of-pocket costs and covers extra expenses
such as private hospital rooms, eyeglasses, and dental care.

In France, the sicker you get, the less you pay. Chronic diseases, such as
diabetes, and critical surgeries, such as a coronary bypass, are reimbursed
at 100 percent. Cancer patients are treated free of charge. Patients
suffering from colon cancer, for instance, can receive Genentech Inc.'s
(DNA) Avastin without charge. In the US, a patient may pay $48,000 a year.

France particularly excels in prenatal and early childhood care. Since 1945
the country has built a widespread network of thousands of health-care
facilities, called Protection Maternelle et Infantile (PMI), to ensure that
every mother and child in the country receives basic preventive care.
Children are evaluated by a team of private-practice pediatricians, nurses,
midwives, psychologists, and social workers. When parents fail to bring
their children in for regular checkups, social workers are dispatched to the
family home. Mothers even receive a financial incentive for attending their
pre- and post-natal visits.

A typical PMI can be found in Goutte d'Or, a poor neighborhood at the foot
of Montmartre that has been home for the past 20 years to a swelling
population of immigrants from Africa and Southeast Asia. On Rue Cavé, a tidy
modern building is given over entirely to caring for expecting mothers,
infants, and young children. The place usually is bustling with kids
scrambling over toys, while mothers, often immigrants in colorful
headdresses and with babies strapped to their backs, talk to their doctors
as part of twice-monthly evaluations.

PMI and other such programs are starting to get attention in U.S.
health-care circles. "If we really want to ensure that no child is left
behind, then the PMI system is a good way to do it," says Daniel J.
Pedersen, president of the Buffett Early Childhood Fund. "It's based on the
practical idea that high-quality investments made at the start of a child's
life will pay huge dividends to both the child and society in the future."

To make all this affordable, France reimburses its doctors at a far lower
rate than US physicians would accept. However, French doctors don't have to
pay back their crushing student loans because medical school is paid for by
the state, and malpractice insurance premiums are a tiny fraction of the
$55,000 a year and up that many US doctors pay. That $55,000 equals the
average yearly net income for French doctors, a third of what their American
counterparts earn. Then again, the French government pays two-thirds of the
social security tax for most French physicians -- a tax that's typically 40
percent of income.

Specialists who have spent at least four years practicing in a hospital are
free to charge what they want, and some charge upwards of $675 for a single
consultation. But American-style compensation is rare. "There is an unspoken
and undefined limit to what you can charge," says Dr. Paul Benfredj, a
gastroenterologist in Paris.

Many French doctors, in fact, earn more by increasing their patient load, or
by prescribing more diagnostic tests and procedures -- a technique, also
popular in the US, that inflates health-care costs. So far France has been
able to hold down the burden on patients through a combination of price
controls and increased government spending, but the latter effort has led to
higher taxes for both employers and workers. In 1990, 7 percent of
health-care expenditures were financed out of general revenue taxes, and the
rest came from mandatory payroll taxes. By 2003, the general revenue figure
had grown to 40 percent, and it's still not enough. The French national
insurance system has been running constant deficits since 1985 and has
ballooned to $13.5 billion.

That's why France is gearing up to make changes. It already requires
patients to register with a general practitioner before visiting a
specialist, or else agree to a lesser reimbursement, much like many US
insurance plans. But France isn't likely to make major changes to a system
most citizens say they like. Why would they? Says Shanny Peer, policy
director at the independent French-American Foundation: "France gets better
results for less money and everyone is covered."

Capell is a senior writer in BusinessWeek's London bureau.


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