Germany’s hospital “reforms”: Another blow to healthcare

Ella Castle

The German federal government, together with the 16 states, has now agreed on key points for the hospital “reforms” proposed by Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (Social Democratic Party, SPD). These so-called reforms will lead to unprecedented hospital closures and significantly worsen healthcare provisions for working people. German Health Minister Karl […]

The German federal government, together with the 16 states, has now agreed on key points for the hospital “reforms” proposed by Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (Social Democratic Party, SPD). These so-called reforms will lead to unprecedented hospital closures and significantly worsen healthcare provisions for working people.

German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach prior to the weekly cabinet meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, February 1, 2023. [AP Photo/Michael Sohn]

In December, the expert commission appointed by the Ministry of Health presented its draft proposals. The commission was headed by Professor Boris Augurzky of the Rheinisch-Westfälisches Wirtschaftsinstitut (RWI) and Reinhard Busse, Professor of Health Care Management at Berlin’s Technical University, both of whom have been calling for the large-scale closure of hospitals for years. This draft has now essentially been passed after some squabbling with the state governments. Only Bavaria voted against, Schleswig-Holstein abstained.

The reform was “a kind of revolution,” Lauterbach asserted after agreement was reached. In future, hospital financing is to be linked to the quality of services and no longer to the number of treatments carried out. Allegedly, this will make per-case flat rates less important, and hospitals will be paid for providing good services.

Payment based on flat rates per case were introduced in 2004 by the then SPD-Green coalition government as part of its socially regressive “Agenda 2010” policies, a process in which Lauterbach was significantly involved. Together with the transformation of hospitals into profit-oriented and partly private companies, these measures contributed to the deterioration of health care and the intolerable working conditions in hospitals and clinics. In the name of the alleged “abolition of flat-rate payments per case,” Lauterbach is now striking the next blow against public healthcare.

To measure the performance of hospitals, uniform “performance groups” with minimum requirements are to be defined. As Lauterbach and other advocates of the reforms keep repeating, this is to ensure that complex treatments, such as those for cancer or strokes, are only carried out in clinics that are appropriately equipped and staffed.

Contrary to the protestations, this will in no way lead to better care, because not an additional cent will be made available, as would be urgently needed for the necessary equipment or sufficiently well-paid staff. In fact, it will only lead to the closure of departments or entire hospitals, as the German Hospital Association and numerous other experts have long protested. Only in exceptional cases do exemption rules apply in this matter, and these only for a limited period.

It also remains completely open how long waiting times at specialised high-performance clinics will be and who will have privileged access to them. In the UK, where the Sunak Tory government is in the process of killing off the National Health Service, it is already almost impossible for seriously ill patients without expensive private insurance to get a timely appointment for treatment, leading to unnecessary deaths.

Another central aspect of Lauterbach’s reforms are so-called “retention fees.” Up to now, hospitals have only been paid for cases treated; in future, an average of 60 percent of the costs are to be covered by the retention fees. According to Lauterbach, this would relieve economic pressures and secure the existence of hospitals despite lower case numbers.

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