
Medical fee schedules are controversial. In this paper we examine the reasons that justify the imposition of fee schedules in the presence of a socially financed health insurance system, and examine the ways of constructing a medical fee schedule. The weakness of fee-for-service tariffs is that they do not allow a control of health care costs if the volume of services is unchecked. Current solutions to this problem--audit of doctors' average cost per case, freeze on new medical practices, or the insurers' discretion in choosing the doctors they reimburse--have multiple drawbacks. Alternatives to fee-for-service payment--such as flat fees, or payment based on the quality of medical services--are discussed.
Fees, Medical, Insurance, Health, Cost Control, Fee Schedules, Humans, Fee-for-Service Plans, Switzerland, Quality of Health Care
Fees, Medical, Insurance, Health, Cost Control, Fee Schedules, Humans, Fee-for-Service Plans, Switzerland, Quality of Health Care
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