Governing decentralization in health care under tough budget constraint: what can we learn from the Italian experience?

In many European countries, since the World War II, there has been a trend towards decentralization of health policy to lower levels of governments, while more recently there have been re-centralization processes. Whether re-centralization will be the new paradigm of European health policy or not is difficult to say. In the Italian National Health Service (SSN) decentralization raised two related questions that might be interesting for the international debate on decentralization in health care: (a) what sort of regulatory framework and institutional balances are required to govern decentralization in health care in a heterogeneous country under tough budget constraints? (b) how can it be ensured that the most advanced parts of the country remain committed to solidarity, supporting the weakest ones? To address these questions this article describes the recent trends in SSN funding and expenditure, it reviews the strategy adopted by the Italian government for governing the decentralization process and discusses the findings to draw policy conclusions. The main lessons emerging from this experience are that: (1) when the differences in administrative and policy skills, in socio-economic standards and social capital are wide, decentralization may lead to undesirable divergent evolution paths; (2) even in decentralized systems, the role of the Central government can be very important to contain health expenditure; (3) a strong governance of the Central government may help and not hinder the enforcement of decentralization; and (4) supporting the weakest Regions and maintaining inter-regional solidarity is hard but possible. In Italy, despite an increasing role of the Central government in steering the SSN, the pattern of regional decentralization of health sector decision making does not seem at risk. Nevertheless, the Italian case confirms the complexity of decentralization and re-centralization processes that sometimes can be paradoxically reinforcing each other.

[1]  E. Cantù,et al.  New funding arrangements in the Italian National Health Service. , 2001, The International journal of health planning and management.

[2]  M. Ferrera,et al.  The rise and fall of democratic universalism: health care reform in Italy, 1978-1994. , 1995, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[3]  Gilberto Turati,et al.  Bailing Out Expectations and Health Expenditure in Italy , 2003, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[4]  Vaida Bankauskaite,et al.  Decentralization In Health Care: Strategies And Outcomes , 2006 .

[5]  F. Taroni,et al.  The Italian health-care system. , 2005, Health economics.

[6]  L J Blum,et al.  Trends and prospects. , 2019, Bioprocess technology.

[7]  G. Fattore Clarifying the scope of Italian NHS coverage. Is it feasible? Is it desirable? , 1999, Health policy.

[8]  E. Bernal-Delgado,et al.  Spain: Health system review. , 2010, Health systems in transition.

[9]  E. Cantù,et al.  Whither managerialism in the Italian National Health Service? , 2006, The International journal of health planning and management.

[10]  V. Mapelli,et al.  I sistemi di governance dei Servizi sanitari regionali , 2007 .

[11]  Elias Mossialos,et al.  Health Care and Cost Containment in the European Union , 2019 .

[12]  A. S. Bhalla Strategies and Outcomes , 1995 .

[13]  R. Saltman,et al.  Conceptualizing decentralization in European health systems: a functional perspective , 2006, Health Economics, Policy and Law.

[14]  Ilaria Mosca,et al.  Is decentralisation the real solution? A three country study. , 2006, Health policy.

[15]  F. Taroni,et al.  The evolution of health-policy making in Italy. , 2005, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[16]  R. Saltman Decentralization, re-centralization and future European health policy. , 2007, European journal of public health.

[17]  J. Magnussen,et al.  Centralized or decentralized? A case study of Norwegian hospital reform. , 2007, Social science & medicine.