Private health insurance in the Netherlands

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Abstract

Private health insurance has been a constituent part of the Dutch health system since the early 20th century. Before the major reform in 2006, almost a quarter of the population held so-called pure private health insurance cover as a substitute for sickness fund cover. The 2006 Health Insurance Act created a single, mandatory health insurance scheme covering the whole population under private law. One of its most important consequences was the abolition of the traditional division between statutory health insurance operated by sickness funds and all other insurance schemes including substitutive private health insurance with experience-based underwriting. However, the newly created scheme is not a pure private arrangement (the term 'pure' will be explained later in this chapter) but one extensively regulated by the state to protect public interests including, among others, solidarity in health care financing and access to health care.

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APA

Maarse, H., & Jeurissen, P. (2020). Private health insurance in the Netherlands. In Private Health Insurance: History, Politics and Performance (pp. 349–376). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781139026468.011

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