Historically, American health care has been a relatively insular industry. Insurers, doctors, and politicians alike are loathe to look at international Health Insurance Germany examples as a possible model. Instead, they focus solely on the negative aspects of Canadian, British, and other systems of socialized health care. The main exception has been the idealization of communist Cuba’s program by people such as Sean Penn and Michael Moore, which even Fidel Castro himself now admits does not work.
However, there is nevertheless some Blocked Account inspiration we can take from foreign health care systems. Granted, it would require its own unique American spin. Still, a group from the University of Minnesota is traveling to Germany to test that hypothesis. Germans are best known for having a hybrid system. Unlike many other western European nations, private health plans still exist in Germany.
Most Germans have universal health care by statute. The government-provided coverage (similar to the “public option” touted–and rejected–during the most recent healthcare reform debate in America) provides basic health services. This has been true ever since 1883, when the Health Insurance Bill that was part of the social legislation of former chancellor Otto von Bismarck. Depending on their income levels, individuals pay sliding premiums and co-payments.
Others in Germany, who desire more generous coverage, purchase private health insurance plans. These are similar to the Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in the United States, meaning that they are nonprofits. This group makes up about one-fourth of the insured population. Employers and employees share the cost of that coverage, which is above and beyond the mandatory insurance.