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Webinar: the Swedish healthcare system and the use of health data

06 December
10:00 - 11:30

Online

Sweden – possibilities and pathways to the Swedish health market and system

 

WEBINAR (90 min – on Teams) – Link will be shared per email, please register below

10.00    Welcome

10.05    Swedish Healthcare System – Primary and Specialist/Secondary Care by/ Fred Kjellson, Innovation Manager, Innovation Skåne

10.25    How Sweden shares health data between systems and actors, and what to expect in the next 5 years by/ Petter Wolff, Business Advisor, Sahlgrenska Science Park /Sekreterare for utredningen om infrastruktur for hälsodata i Sverige

10.45    Health data in Sweden, possibilities and hurdles by/ Maria Hassel, Senior Advisor and International Coordinator, eHealth Agency.

11.05    Establish your company in Sweden by/ Robert Nygårdhs, Director Sweden, Innovation Norway & Tina Nordlander, Country Manager Sweden, Innovation Norway

How to establish a company in Sweden, how much time does it take and how much does it cost? Presentation of platforms, accelerators, innovation and business partners. Access to soft funding and private capital.

11.18    DNV Imatis by/ Anund Rannestad, VP Nordic Business, DNV Imatis

Sharing of data in real-time and DNV Imatis’ experience in Sweden (establishment and sales)

11.30    End

 

Register below to attend this exclusive Webinar.

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Facts about Sweden:

Demographics

10.1mill population

19,8% population age 65+

Practicing physicians per 1,000 population

10,9 nurses per 1000 population

2,2 hospital beds per 1000 population

 

SPENDING

$5,447 Health care spending per capita

$807 Out-of-pocket health spending per capita

$515 Spending on pharmaceuticals (prescription and OTC) per capita

 

HEALTH STATUS & DISEASE BURDEN

82.5 Life expectancy at birth (years)

13.1% Obesity prevalence

4.8% Diabetes prevalence

18% Adults with multiple chronic conditions (2 or more)

 

Insurance coverage (% of population)

Public coverage: 100%

Private supplementary coverage: 6% (Voluntary supplementary coverage enables quicker access to elective services and greater choice of private ambulatory care specialists; mainly employer-sponsored plans)

 

HEALTH SYSTEM OVERVIEW

Hospitals are a mix of public and private, nonprofit, and for-profit. Most are public community hospitals owned by the regions and are paid primarily through annual regional global budgets or, less frequently, a mix of global budgets, diagnosis-related groups, and pay-for-performance payments. Patient cost-sharing: Copayments vary from USD 5.50 to 11.00 per hospitalization day.

Prescription drugs on the national formulary list are covered. Patient cost-sharing: Patients pay the full cost of drugs up to USD 123 annually. When this threshold is reached, a subsidy kicks in to help cover costs up to an annual ceiling of USD 246, above which drugs are free.

Mental health services are provided in primary care settings and in psychiatric hospitals. Minor problems are usually addressed in the former, by either a GP or a psychologist or psychotherapist. Patient cost-sharing: Same as other outpatient and inpatient services.

Long-term care is provided through public and private home care and nursing home providers. Municipalities are responsible for organizing and financing long-term care (through taxation), and they also reimburse informal caregivers. Patient cost-sharing: Older adults and disabled people incur a maximum copayment of USD 194 per month (2016) for long-term care services. There is no means testing.

Safety nets take the form of cost-sharing ceilings. For instance, annual out of pocket payments for health care visits are capped at USD 120. The same spending caps apply to all individuals and families, regardless of income. In addition, children, the elderly, and pregnant women or new mothers are exempt from copayments and other user charges.

Care coordination is tied to many performance-related payments to providers. Care coordination for patients with chronic disease is the focus of a national grant initiative launched in 2015, particularly in the areas of patient-centered care, evidence-based care, and prevention and early detection.

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