Abstract
France has provided universal health care through employment-based health insurance funds. As its governments have increasingly used tax revenues to supplement payroll levies, they have assumed a larger role. Faced with widening deficits in the funds' accounts, the National Assembly adopted in August 2004 legislation designed to decrease health expenses, increase revenues to the funds, and improve quality of care. The apparent impacts of the so-called Douste-Blazy law are to reaffirm social solidarity and equality of access; to reinforce central control rather than relying more on decentralized and market forces; to give the now-unified funds a stronger director, shielded not only from labor and business but also, possibly, from the central government; to allow French private physicians to retain their unrivaled freedom of prescription; and to continue France's reliance on taxes as well as payroll levies to finance its health care.
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France's medical care system, desite top ranking from WHO, has faced problems in management and financing. This article brings the reader up to date.
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Sorum, P. France Tries to Save its Ailing National Health Insurance System. J Public Health Pol 26, 231–245 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.jphp.3200033
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.jphp.3200033