Artículo de revista
Health policy in the concertacion era (1990-2010): Reforms the chilean way
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Social Science & Medicine 182 (2017) 117e126
10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.04.012
Autor
Martínez Gutiérrez, María Soledad
Cuadrado Nahum, Cristóbal
Institución
Resumen
The Chilean health system has experienced important transformations in the last decades with a
neoliberal turn to privatization of the health insurance and healthcare market since the Pinochet reforms
of the 1980s. During 20 years of center-left political coalition governments several reforms were
attempted to regulate and reform such markets. This paper analyzes regulatory policies for the private
health insurance and health care delivery market, adopted during the 1990e2010 period. A framework of
variation in market types developed by Gingrich is adopted as analytical perspective. The set of policies
advanced in this period could be expected to shift the responsibility of access to care from individuals to
the collective and give control to the State or the consumers vis a vis producers. Nevertheless, the effect
of the implemented reforms has been mixed. Regulations on private health insurers were ineffective in
terms of shifting power to the consumer or the state. In contrast, the healthcare delivery market showed
a trend of increasing payers' and consumers’ control and the set of implemented reforms partially
steered the market toward collective responsibility of access by creating a submarket of guaranteed
services (AUGE) with lower copayments and fully funded services. Emerging unintended consequences
of the adopted policies and potential explanations are discussed. In sum, attempts to use regulation to
improve the collective dimension of the Chilean health system has enabled some progress, but several
challenges had persisted.