IB2012233 ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE AND SOCIAL PROTECTION
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Abstract
In France, the access to healthcare has been conceived as a social right and is mainly managed through the coverage of the population by the National Health Insurance, which is a part of the whole French social security scheme. This system was based on the so-called Bismarckian model, which implies that it requires full employment and solid family links, as the insured persons are the workers and their dependents. This paper examines the typical problems that this system has to face as far as the right to healthcare is concerned. First, it addresses the need to introduce some universal coverage programs, in order to integrate the excluded population. Then, it addresses the issue of financial sustainability as the structural weakness of the French system – in which healthcare is still mainly provided by private practice physicians and governed by the principle of freedom – leads to conceive and implement complex forms of regulations between the State, the Social security institutions and the healthcare providers.
Key-words:
Healthcare Network, Right to health, Health insurance.