Travelling home for treatment and EU patients’ rights to care abroad: Results of a survey among German students at Maastricht University

Abstract Empirical evidence on patient mobility in Europe is lacking despite widespread legal, policy and media attention which the phenomenon attracts. This paper presents quantitative data on the health care seeking behaviour of German students at Maastricht University in the Netherlands. A cross-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health policy (Amsterdam) 2012-04, Vol.105 (1), p.38-45
Hauptverfasser: Glinos, Irene A, Doering, Nora, Maarse, Hans
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container_title Health policy (Amsterdam)
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creator Glinos, Irene A
Doering, Nora
Maarse, Hans
description Abstract Empirical evidence on patient mobility in Europe is lacking despite widespread legal, policy and media attention which the phenomenon attracts. This paper presents quantitative data on the health care seeking behaviour of German students at Maastricht University in the Netherlands. A cross-sectional survey design was applied with a mixed-methods approach including open and closed questions. Questionnaire items were based on a theoretical model of patient mobility and input from focus group discussions with German students living in Maastricht. 235 valid surveys were completed, representing ca. 8% of the target population. Data collection took place in Oct–Dec 2010. Of respondents who received medical care over the last two years, 97% returned to Germany; of these, 76% travelled to their home city for medical treatment. 72% received care only in Germany, i.e. not even once in Maastricht. Distance partly influenced whether students travelled to Germany, returned home or stayed in Maastricht, and the type of care accessed. Key motivations were familiarity with home providers/system, and reimbursement issues. In the context of the new EU Directive on patients’ rights, the findings call into question whether Europeans use entitlements to cross-border care and what the real potential of patient mobility is. The results demonstrate the existence and magnitude of return movements as a sub-group of patient mobility.
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This paper presents quantitative data on the health care seeking behaviour of German students at Maastricht University in the Netherlands. A cross-sectional survey design was applied with a mixed-methods approach including open and closed questions. Questionnaire items were based on a theoretical model of patient mobility and input from focus group discussions with German students living in Maastricht. 235 valid surveys were completed, representing ca. 8% of the target population. Data collection took place in Oct–Dec 2010. Of respondents who received medical care over the last two years, 97% returned to Germany; of these, 76% travelled to their home city for medical treatment. 72% received care only in Germany, i.e. not even once in Maastricht. Distance partly influenced whether students travelled to Germany, returned home or stayed in Maastricht, and the type of care accessed. Key motivations were familiarity with home providers/system, and reimbursement issues. 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source MEDLINE; PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Basic rights
Colleges and universities
Cross-border health care
Cross-sectional analysis
Cross-Sectional Studies
Delivery of Health Care - legislation & jurisprudence
Delivery of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
EU entitlements
European Union
European Union - organization & administration
Female
Focus groups
Germans
Germany
Germany - ethnology
Health administration
Health care
Health care seeking behaviour
Health Care Surveys
Humans
Internal Medicine
Location
Male
Medical service
Medical treatment
Mobility
Motivation
Netherlands
Patient mobility
Patient rights
Patient Rights - legislation & jurisprudence
Patients
Patients’ rights Directive
Questionnaires
Students
Students - legislation & jurisprudence
Surveys
Surveys and Questionnaires
Travel - legislation & jurisprudence
Undergraduate students
Universities - legislation & jurisprudence
title Travelling home for treatment and EU patients’ rights to care abroad: Results of a survey among German students at Maastricht University
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