Spain: health system review 2010
Health Systems in Transition, Vol. 12 No. 4
Overview
The European Observatory's Health Systems in Transition (HiT) reviews are country-based reports
that provide a detailed description of a health system and of policy
initiatives in progress or under development. HiTs examine different
approaches to the organization, financing and delivery of health services and the
role of the main actors in health systems; describe the institutional framework,
process, content and implementation of health and health care policies; and
highlight challenges and areas that require more in-depth analysis.
This edition of the Spanish HiT focuses on the consequences of the totally
devolved status, consolidated in 2002, and the implementation of the road map
established by the 2003 SNS Cohesion and Quality Act. Many of the steps
already taken underline the improvement path chosen: the SNS Inter-territorial
Council (CISNS) comprising the national and regional health ministries
was upgraded to the highest SNS authority, paving the way for a brand new
consensus-based policy-making process grounded in knowledge management;
its effects are progressively starting to be evident.
It led the way to the SNS
common benefits basket or the SNS human resources policy framework,
laying the cornerstones for coordination and the enactment of the SNS Quality
Plan. The Plan includes the work in progress to implement the national health
information system, the development of a single electronic clinical record (eCR)
containing relevant clinical information guaranteeing to patients continuity
of care outside their Autonomous Community (AC) of residence or a single
patient ID to be used across the country, thus creating the basis for the SNS
functional single insurer.
It has also become one of the main drivers for the
design, implementation and monitoring of quality standards across the SNS,
developing national health strategies to tackle both most prevalent chronic
diseases (e.g. cancer, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes) and rare diseases, as
well as the National Strategy on Patient Safety.
The SNS still has many challenges to face, some of which are commonplace
across Western developed countries and some of which result from its own
idiosyncratic features. The agenda laid out by the CISNS seems to address many
of these challenges; its implementation will certainly test the political maturity
of the system, and that of the coordination and cohesion tools developed. The
eventual results of its implementation will deserve close attention, setting the
evaluative agenda for the next few years.