The health care system under French national health insurance: lessons for health reform in the United States

Am J Public Health. 2003 Jan;93(1):31-7. doi: 10.2105/ajph.93.1.31.

Abstract

The French health system combines universal coverage with a public-private mix of hospital and ambulatory care and a higher volume of service provision than in the United States. Although the system is far from perfect, its indicators of health status and consumer satisfaction are high; its expenditures, as a share of gross domestic product, are far lower than in the United States; and patients have an extraordinary degree of choice among providers. Lessons for the United States include the importance of government's role in providing a statutory framework for universal health insurance; recognition that piecemeal reform can broaden a partial program (like Medicare) to cover, eventually, the entire population; and understanding that universal coverage can be achieved without excluding private insurers from the supplementary insurance market.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Consumer Behavior
  • France / epidemiology
  • Health Care Reform* / legislation & jurisprudence
  • Health Status
  • Humans
  • Internationality
  • Models, Organizational*
  • National Health Insurance, United States
  • National Health Programs / legislation & jurisprudence
  • National Health Programs / organization & administration*
  • Politics
  • Private Sector
  • Public Sector
  • United States
  • Universal Health Insurance / legislation & jurisprudence
  • Universal Health Insurance / organization & administration*